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Also by Rick Warren 

The Purpose-Driven® Church 


RICK WARREN 


THE 

PURPOSE 



WHAT ON EARTH AM I HERE FOR? 


7on df.rvan ~ 


GUANO RAPIDS. MICHICAN OSSO USA 




The Purpose-Driven® Life 

Adobe® Acrobat® eBook Reader® format 

Copyright © 2002 by Rick Warren 

This title is also available as a Zondervan audio product. 

Visit www.zondervan.com/audiopages for more information. 

Requests for information should be addressed to: 

Zondervan, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49530 

ISBN 0-310-25482-5 

The Scripture versions cited in this book are identified in appendix 3, which hereby becomes 
a part of this copyright page. 

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval 
system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, 
recording, or any other—except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without the prior 
permission of the publisher. 

Illustrations by Michael Halbert, Copyright © 2002 Michael Halbert 
Interior design by Jim Dobbs, Mary Deschenes, Julie Head 

Printed in the United States of America 



- 


This book is dedicated to you. 

Before you were born, God planned this moment in 
your life. It is no accident that you are reading this 
book. God longs for you to discover the life he created 
you to live—here on earth, and forever in eternity. 

J 

It’s in Christ that we find out who we are and 
what we are living for. Long before we first heard 
of Christ,... he had his eye on us, had designs on us 
for glorious living, part of the overall purpose he is 
working out in everything and everyone. 

Ephesians i:ii (Msg) 

I am grateful to the hundreds of writers and teachers, 
both classical and contemporary, who have shaped my 
life and helped me learn these truths. I thank God and 
you for the privilege of sharing them with you. 

_ 













CONTENTS 



A Journey with Purpose 9 
My Covenant 13 

WHAT ON EARTH AM I HERE FOR? 

Day 1 It All Starts with God 17 

Day 2 You Are Not an Accident 22 

Day 3 What Drives Your Life? 27 

Day 4 Made to Last Forever 36 

Day 5 Seeing Life from God’s View 41 

Day 6 Life Is a Temporary Assignment 47 

Day 7 The Reason for Everything 53 

PURPOSE #1: You Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 
Day 8 Planned for God’s Pleasure 63 
Day 9 What Makes God Smile? 69 
Day 10 The Heart of Worship 77 
Day 11 Becoming Best Friends with God 85 
Day 12 Developing Your Friendship with God 92 
Day 13 Worship That Pleases God 100 
Day 14 When God Seems Distant 107 

PURPOSE #2: You Were Formed for God’s Family 
Day 15 Formed for God’s Family 117 
Day 16 What Matters Most 123 
Day 17 A Place to Belong 130 


Day 18 Experiencing Life Together 138 
Day 19 Cultivating Community 145 

Day 20 Restoring Broken Fellowship 152 
Day 21 Protecting Your Church 160 

PURPOSE #3: You Were Created to Become Like Christ 
Day 22 Created to Become Like Christ 171 
Day 23 How We Grow 179 
Day 24 Transformed by Truth 185 
Day 25 Transformed by Trouble 193 

Day 26 Growing through Temptation 201 
Day 27 Defeating Temptation 209 

Day 28 It Takes Time 217 

PURPOSE #4: You Were Shaped for Serving God 
Day 29 Accepting Your Assignment 227 
Day 30 Shaped for Serving God 234 

Day 31 Understanding Your Shape 241 
Day 32 Using What God Gave You 249 
Day 33 How Real Servants Act 257 
Day 34 Thinking Like a Servant 265 

Day 35 God’s Power in Your Weakness 272 

PURPOSE #5: You Were Made for a Mission 
Day 36 Made for a Mission 281 
Day 37 Sharing Your Life Message 289 
Day 38 Becoming a World-Class Christian 297 
Day 39 Balancing Your Life 305 
Day 40 Living with Purpose 312 

Appendix i: Discussion Questions 320 

Appendix 2: Resources 323 

Appendix 3: Why Use So Many Translations? 325 

Notes 327 

About the Author 338 

About the Publisher 339 



A JOURNEY 
WITH PURPOSE 


Getting the Most from This Book 


This is more than a book; it is a guide to a 40 -day spiritual 
journey that will enable you to discover the answer to life’s most 
important question: What on earth am I here for? By the end of 
this journey you will know God’s purpose for your life and will 
understand the big picture—how all the pieces of your life fit 
together. Having this perspective will reduce your stress, simplify 
your decisions, increase your satisfaction, and, most important, 
prepare you for eternity. 

Your Next 40 Days 

Today the average life span is 25,550 days. That’s how long 
you will live if you are typical. Don’t you think it would be a wise 
use of time to set aside 40 of those days to figure out what God 
wants you to do with the rest of them? 

The Bible is clear that God considers 40 days a spiritually 
significant time period. Whenever God wanted to prepare 
someone for his purposes, he took 40 days: 


A Journey with Purpose 


9 


• Noah’s life was transformed by 40 days of rain. 

• Moses was transformed by 40 days on Mount Sinai. 

• The spies were transformed by 40 days in the Promised Land. 

• David was transformed by Goliath’s 40 -day challenge. 

• Elijah was transformed when God gave him 40 days of 
strength from a single meal. 

• The entire city of Nineveh was transformed when God gave 
the people 40 days to change. 

• Jesus was empowered by 40 days in the wilderness. 

• The disciples were transformed by 40 days with Jesus after 
his resurrection. 

The next 40 days will transform your life. 

This book is divided into 40 brief chapters. I strongly urge you 
to read only one chapter a day, so you will have time to think about 
the implications for your life. The Bible says, “Let God transform 
you into a new person by changing the way you think. Then you will 
know what God wants you to do.’ n 

One reason most books don’t transform us is that we are so 
eager to read the next chapter, we don’t pause and take the time 
to seriously consider what we have just read. We rush to the next 
truth without reflecting on what we have learned. 

Don’t just read this book. Interact with it. Underline it. 

Write your own thoughts in the margins. Make it your book. 
Personalize it! The books that have helped me most are the ones 
that I reacted to, not just read. 

Four Features to Help You 

At the end of each chapter is a section called “Thinking about 
My Purpose.” There you will find: 

• A Point to Ponder. This is a nugget of truth that summarizes 
a principle of purpose-driven living that you can reflect on 
throughout your day. Paul told Timothy, “Reflect on what I 
am saying, for the Lord will give you insight into all this .” 2 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


io 


• A Verse to Remember. This is a Bible verse that teaches a 
truth from that chapter. If you really want to improve your 
life, memorizing Scripture may be the most important habit 
you can begin. You can either copy these verses onto small 
cards to carry with you, or purchase a Purpose-Driven® Life 
Scripture Keeper Plus. 

• A Question to Consider. These questions will help you 
think about the implications of what you have read and how 
it applies to you personally. Let me encourage you to write 
your answers in the margin of this book or in a notebook, or 
obtain a copy of The Purpose-Driven Life Journal, a 
companion book designed for this purpose. Writing down 
your thoughts is the best way to clarify them. 

In appendix 1 you will find: 

• Discussion Questions. I strongly urge you to get one or 
more friends to join you in reading this book during the 
next 40 days. A journey is always better when it is shared. 
With a partner or a small reading group you can discuss what 
you read and bounce ideas off each other. This will help you 
grow stronger and deeper spiritually. Real spiritual growth is 
never an isolated, individualistic pursuit. Maturity is 
produced through relationships and community. 

The best way to explain God’s purpose for your life is to allow 
the Scripture to speak for itself, so in this book the Bible is 
quoted extensively, using over a thousand different verses from 
fifteen English translations and paraphrases. I have varied the 
versions used for several important reasons, which I explain in 
appendix 3 . 

I Have Been Praying for You 

As I wrote this book, I often prayed that you would experience 
the incredible sense of hope, energy, and joy that comes from 


A Journey with Purpose 


II 


discovering what God put you on this planet to do. There’s 
nothing quite like it. I am excited because I know all the great 
things that are going to happen to you. They happened to me, 
and I have never been the same since I discovered the purpose of 
my life. 

Because I know the benefits, I want to challenge you to stick 
with this spiritual journey for the next 40 days, not missing a 
single daily reading. Your life is worth taking the time to think 
about it. Make it a daily appointment on your schedule. If you 
will commit to this, let’s sign a covenant together. There is 
something significant about signing your name to a commitment. 
If you get a partner to read through this with you, have him or 
her sign it, too. Let’s get started together! 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


12 




My Covenant 


With God’s help, I commit the next 40 days of my 
life to discovering God’s purpose for my life. 


Your name 


Partner’s name 

Rick Warren 

“Two are better off than one, because together they 
can work more effectively. If one oj them falls down, 
the other can help him up... Two people can resist 
an attack that would defeat one person alone. 

A rope made oj three cords is hard to break. ” 
Ecclesiastes 4:9 (tev) 
















WHAT ON EARTH 
AM I HERE FOR? 

A life devoted to things is a dead life, a stump; 
a God-shaped life is a flourishing tree. 
Proverbs 11:28 (Msg) 

Blessed are those who trust in the Lord.... 
They are like trees planted along a riverbank, with 
roots that reach deep into the water. Such trees 
are not bothered by the heat or worried by long 
months ofdrought. Their leaves stay green, 
and they go right on producing delicious fruit. 
Jeremiah 17:7 —8 (NLT) 





It All Starts with God 


For everything, absolutely everything 
above and below, visible and invisible,... 
everything got started in him and 
finds its purpose in him. 
Colossians i:i6 (Msg) 

Unless you assume a God, the question 
of life’s purpose is meaningless. 
Bertrand Russell, atheist 


It’s not about you. 

The purpose of your life is far greater than your own personal 
fulfillment, your peace of mind, or even your happiness. It’s far 
greater than your family, your career, or even your wildest dreams 
and ambitions. If you want to know why you were placed on this 
planet, you must begin with God. You were born by his purpose 
and for his purpose. 

The search for the purpose of life has puzzled people for 
thousands of years. That’s because we typically begin at the 
wrong starting point—ourselves. We ask self-centered questions 
like What do / want to be? What should I do with my life? What 
are my goals, my ambitions, my dreams for my future? But 
focusing on ourselves will never reveal our life’s purpose. The 


What on Earth Am I Here For? 


17 


Bible says, “It is God who directs the lives of his creatures; everyone’s 
life is in his power .” 1 

Contrary to what many popular books, movies, and seminars 
tell you, you won’t discover your life’s meaning by looking 

within yourself. You’ve probably 
tried that already. You didn’t create 
yourself, so there is no way you 
can tell yourself what you were 
created for! If I handed you an 
invention you had never seen 
before, you wouldn’t know its 
purpose, and the invention itself wouldn’t be able to tell you 
either. Only the creator or the owner’s manual could reveal its 
purpose. 

I once got lost in the mountains. When I stopped to ask for 
directions to the campsite, I was told, “ Tou can’t get therefrom 
here. You must start from the other side of the mountain!” In the 
same way, you cannot arrive at your life’s purpose by starting with 
a focus on yourself. You must begin with God, your Creator. You 
exist only because God wills that you exist. You were made by 
God and for God—and until you understand that, life will never 
make sense. It is only in God that we discover our origin, our 
identity, our meaning, our purpose, our significance, and our 
destiny. Every other path leads to a dead end. 

Many people try to use God for their own self-actualization, 
but that is a reversal of nature and is doomed to failure. You 
were made for God, not vice versa, and life is about letting God 
use you for his purposes, not your using him for your own 
purpose. The Bible says, “Obsession with self in these matters is a 
dead end; attention to God leads us out into the open, into a 
spacious, free life .” 2 

I have read many books that suggest ways to discover the 
purpose of my life. All of them could be classified as “self-help” 
books because they approach the subject from a self-centered 


-——- 

Focusing on ourselves will 
never reveal our life’s purpose. 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


18 



viewpoint. Self-help books, even Christian ones, usually offer the 
same predictable steps to finding your life’s purpose: Consider 
your dreams. Clarify your values. Set some goals. Figure out what 
you are good at. Aim high. Go for it! Be disciplined. Believe you 
can achieve your goals. Involve others. Never give up. 

Of course, these recommendations often lead to great success. 
You can usually succeed in reaching a goal if you put your mind 
to it. But being successful and fulfilling your life’s purpose are not 
at all the same issue! You could reach all your personal goals, 
becoming a raving success by the world’s standard, and still miss 
the purposes for which God created you. You need more than 
self-help advice. The Bible says, “Self-help is no help at all. Self- 
sacrifice is the way, my way, to finding yourself, your true self ” 3 

This is not a self-help book. It is not about finding the right 
career, achieving your dreams, or planning your life. It is not about 
how to cram more activities into an overloaded schedule. Actually, 
it will teach you how to do less in life—by focusing on what 
matters most. It is about becoming what God created you to be. 

How, then, do you discover the purpose you were created for? 
You have only two options. Your first option is speculation. This is 
what most people choose. They conjecture, they guess, they 
theorize. When people say, “I’ve 
always thought life is . . .,” they 
mean, “This is the best guess I can 
come up with.” 

For thousands of years, brilliant 
philosophers have discussed and 
speculated about the meaning of 
life. Philosophy is an important 

subject and has its uses, but when it comes to determining the 
purpose of life, even the wisest philosophers are just guessing. 

Dr. Hugh Moorhead, a philosophy professor at Northeastern 
Illinois University, once wrote to 250 of the best-known 
philosophers, scientists, writers, and intellectuals in the world, 


- - 

You were made by God and for 
God—and until you understand 
that, life will never make sense. 

— - 


What on Earth Am I Here For? 


19 



asking them, “What is the meaning of life?” He then published 
their responses in a book. Some offered their best guesses, some 
admitted that they just made up a purpose for life, and others 
were honest enough to say they were clueless. In fact, a number 
of famous intellectuals asked Professor Moorhead to write back 
and tell them if he discovered the purpose of life! 4 

Fortunately, there is an alternative to speculation about the 
meaning and purpose of life. It’s revelation. We can turn to what 
God has revealed about life in his Word. The easiest way to 
discover the purpose of an invention is to ask the creator of it. 

The same is true for discovering your life’s purpose: Ask God. 

God has not left us in the dark to wonder and guess. He has 
clearly revealed his five purposes for our lives through the Bible. 

It is our Owner’s Manual, explaining why we are alive, how life 
works, what to avoid, and what to expect in the future. It explains 
what no self-help or philosophy book could know. The Bible says, 
“God’s wisdom .. .goes deep into the interior of his purposes.... It’s 
not the latest message, but more like the oldest—what 
God determined as the way to bring out his best in us.” s 

God is not just the starting point of your life; he is 
the source of it. To discover your purpose in life you 
must turn to God’s Word, not the world’s wisdom. 
You must build your life on eternal truths, not pop 
psychology, success-motivation, or inspirational 
stories. The Bible says, “It’s in Christ that we find out who we are 
and what we are living for. Long before we first heard of Christ and 
got our hopes up, he had his eye on us, had designs on us for glorious 
living, part of the overall purpose he is working out in everything 
and everyone .” 6 This verse gives us three insights into your 
purpose. 

1 . You discover your identity and purpose through a 
relationship with Jesus Christ. If you don’t have such a 
relationship, I will later explain how to begin one. 


DAY ONE: 

IT ALL 
STARTS 
WITH 
GOD 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


20 


2 . God was thinking of you long before you ever thought 
about him. His purpose for your life predates your 
conception. He planned it before you 

existed, without your input! You may 
choose your career, your spouse, your 
hobbies, and many other parts of 
your life, but you don’t get to choose 
your purpose. 

3 . The purpose of your life fits into a much 
larger, cosmic purpose that God has designed for 
eternity. That’s what this book is about. 



Andrei Bitov, a Russian novelist, grew up under an atheistic 
Communist regime. But God got his attention one dreary day. 
He recalls, “In my twenty-seventh year, while riding the metro in 
Leningrad (now St. Petersburg) I was overcome with a despair so 
great that life seemed to stop at once, preempting the future 
entirely, let alone any meaning. Suddenly, all by itself, a phrase 
appeared: Without God life makes no sense. Repeating it in 
astonishment, I rode the phrase up like a moving staircase, got 
out of the metro and walked into God’s light.” 7 

You may have felt in the dark about your purpose in life. 
Congratulations, you’re about to walk into the light. 


- 


Day One 

Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: It’s not about me. 

Verse to Remember: a Everything pot started in him 
and finds its purpose in him.” Colossians 1 : 16 b (Msg) 


Question to Consider: In spite of all the advertising 
around me, how can I remind myself that life is really 
about living for God, not myself? 

---- . 


What on Earth Am I Here For? 


21 








You Are Not an Accident 


I am your Creator. You were in my care 
even before you were born. 

Isaiah 44:2a (CEV) 

God doesn’t play dice. 

Albert Einstein 


You are not an accident. 

Your birth was no mistake or mishap, and your life is no fluke 
of nature. Your parents may not have planned you, but God did. 
He was not at all surprised by your birth. In fact, he expected it. 

Long before you were conceived by your parents, you were 
conceived in the mind of God. He thought of you first. It is not 
fate, nor chance, nor luck, nor coincidence that you are 
breathing at this very moment. You are alive because God 
wanted to create you! The Bible says, “The Lord will fulfill his 
purpose for me .” 1 

God prescribed every single detail of your body. He 
deliberately chose your race, the color of your skin, your hair, and 
every other feature. He custom-made your body just the way he 
wanted it. He also determined the natural talents you would 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


22 


possess and the uniqueness of your personality. The Bible says, 
“Ton know me inside and out, you know every bone in my body; Tou 
know exactly how I was made, bit by bit, how I was sculpted from 
nothing into something .” 2 

Because God made you for a reason, he also decided when you 
would be born and how long you would live. He planned the days 
of your life in advance, choosing the exact time of your birth and 
death. The Bible says, “Tou saw me before I was born and scheduled 
each day of my life before I began to breathe. Every day was recorded 
in your Book !” 2 

God also planned where you’d be born and where you’d live for 
his purpose. Your race and nationality are no accident. God left 
no detail to chance. He planned it all for his purpose. The Bible 
says, “From one man he made every nation,... and he determined 
the times set for them and the exact places where they should live.” A 
Nothing in your life is arbitrary. It’s all for a purpose. 

Most amazing, God decided how you would be born. 

Regardless of the circumstances of your birth or who your parents 
are, God had a plan in creating you. It doesn’t matter whether 
your parents were good, bad, or indifferent. God knew that those 
two individuals possessed exactly the right genetic makeup to 
create the custom “you” he had in mind. They had the DNA God 
wanted to make you. 

While there are illegitimate parents, there are no illegitimate 
children. Many children are 
unplanned by their parents, but 
they are not unplanned by God. 

God’s purpose took into account 
human error, and even sin. 

God never does anything 
accidentally, and he never makes 
mistakes. He has a reason for 

everything he creates. Every plant and every animal was planned 
by God, and every person was designed with a purpose in mind. 


_ 


Long before you were conceived 
by your parents, you were 
conceived in the mind of God. 


23 


What on Earth Am I Here For? 



God’s motive for creating you was his love. The Bible says, “Long 
before he laid down earth’s foundations, he had us in mind, had 
settled on us as the focus of his love.” s 

God was thinking of you even before he made the world. In 
fact, that’s why he created it! God designed this planet’s 
environment just so we could live in it. We are the focus of his 
love and the most valuable of all his creation. The Bible says, 

“God decided to give us life through the word of truth so we might be 
the most important of all the things he made .” 6 This is how much 
God loves and values you! 

God is not haphazard; he planned it all with great precision. 

The more physicists, biologists, and other scientists learn about 
the universe, the better we understand how it is uniquely suited 
for our existence, custom-made with the exact specifications that 
make human life possible. 

Dr. Michael Denton, senior research fellow in human 
molecular genetics at the University of Otago in New Zealand, 
has concluded, “All the evidence available in the biological 
sciences supports the core proposition . . . that the cosmos is a 
specially designed whole with life and mankind as its 
fundamental goal and purpose, a whole in which all facets of 

reality have their meaning and explanation in this 
central fact.” 7 The Bible said the same thing 
thousands of years earlier: “God formed the 
earth.... He did not create it to be empty 
but formed it to be inhabited” & 

Why did God do all this? Why did he 
bother to go to all the trouble of creating a 
universe for us? Because he is a God of love. This kind of love is 
difficult to fathom, but it’s fundamentally reliable. You were 
created as a special object of God’s love! God made you so he 
could love you. This is a truth to build your life on. 

The Bible tells us, “God is love .” 9 It doesn’t say God has love. 
He is love! Love is the essence of God’s character. There is perfect 

24 



The Purpose-Driven Life 


love in the fellowship of the Trinity, so God didn’t need to create 
you. He wasn’t lonely. But he wanted to make you in order to 
express his love. God says, “I have carried you since 
you were horn ; I have taken care of you from your 
birth. Even when you are old, I will be the same. Even 
when your hair has turned gray, I will take care of 
you. I made you and will take care of you.” 10 

If there was no God, we would all be 
“accidents,” the result of astronomical random 
chance in the universe. You could stop reading this book, because 
life would have no purpose or meaning or significance. There 
would be no right or wrong, and no hope beyond your brief years 
here on earth. 

But there is a God who made you for a reason, and your life 
has profound meaning! We discover that meaning and purpose 
only when we make God the reference point of our lives. The 
Message paraphrase of Romans 12:3 says, “The only accurate 
way to understand ourselves is by what God is and by what he does 
for us. ” 

This poem by Russell Kelfer sums it up: 

You are who you are for a reason. 

You’re part of an intricate plan. 

You’re a precious and perfect unique design, 

Called God’s special woman or man. 

You look like you look for a reason. 

Our God made no mistake. 

He knit you together within the womb, 

You’re just what he wanted to make. 

The parents you had were the ones he chose, 

And no matter how you may feel, 

They were custom-designed with God’s plan in mind, 

And they bear the Master’s seal. 


DAY TWO: 

YOU ARE 
NOT AN 
ACCIDENT 


25 


What on Earth Am I Here For? 


No, that trauma you faced was not easy. 
And God wept that it hurt you so; 

But it was allowed to shape your heart 
So that into his likeness you’d grow. 

You are who you are for a reason, 

You’ve been formed by the Master’s rod. 
You are who you are, beloved, 

Because there is a God! 11 




Day Two 

Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: I am not an accident. 

Verse to Remember: “I am your Creator. Tou were in 
my care even before you were born.” Isaiah 44:2 (CEV) 


Question to Consider: Knowing that God uniquely 
created me, what areas of my personality, background 
and physical appearance am I struggling to accept? 


The Purpose-Driven Life 








What Drives Your Life? 


I observed that the basic motive for success 
is the drivingforce of envy and jealousy! 
Ecclesiastes 4:4 (LB) 

The man without a purpose is like 
a ship without a rudder—a waif 
a nothing, a no man. 

Thomas Carlyle 


Everyone’s life is driven by something. 

Most dictionaries define the verb drive as “to guide, to control, 
or to direct.” Whether you are driving a car, a nail, or a golf ball, 
you are guiding, controlling, and directing it at that moment. 
What is the driving force in your life? 

Right now you may be driven by a problem, a pressure, or a 
deadline. You may be driven by a painful memory, a haunting 
fear, or an unconscious belief. There are hundreds of 
circumstances, values, and emotions that can drive your life. Here 
are five of the most common ones: 

Many people are driven by guilt. They spend their entire lives 
running from regrets and hiding their shame. Guilt-driven people 
are manipulated by memories. They allow their past to control 
their future. They often unconsciously punish themselves by 


What on Earth Am I Here For? 


27 


sabotaging their own success. When Cain sinned, his guilt 
disconnected him from God’s presence, and God said, “Ton will 
be ci restless wanderer on the earth.” 1 That describes most people 
today—wandering through life without a purpose. 

We are products of our past, but we don’t have to be prisoners 
of it. God’s purpose is not limited by your past. He turned a 
murderer named Moses into a leader and a coward named Gideon 
into a courageous hero, and he can do amazing things with the 
rest of your life, too. God specializes in giving people a fresh start. 
The Bible says, “What happiness for those whose guilt has been 
forgiven!... What relief for those who have confessed their sins and 
God has cleared their record.” 2 

Many people are driven by resentment and anger. They hold 
on to hurts and never get over them. Instead of releasing their 
pain through forgiveness, they rehearse it over and over in their 
minds. Some resentment-driven people “clam up” and internalize 
their anger, while others “blow up” and explode it onto others. 
Both responses are unhealthy and unhelpful. 

Resentment always hurts you more than it does the person you 
resent. While your offender has probably forgotten the offense 
and gone on with life, you continue to stew in your pain, 
perpetuating the past. 

Listen: Those who have hurt you in the past cannot continue 
to hurt you now unless you hold on to the pain through 
resentment. Your past is past! Nothing will change it. You are 
only hurting yourself with your bitterness. For your own sake, 
learn from it, and then let it go. The Bible says, “To worry yourself 
to death with resentment would be a foolish, senseless thing to do.” 2 

Many people are driven by fear. Their fears may be a result of 
a traumatic experience, unrealistic expectations, growing up in a 
high-control home, or even genetic predisposition. Regardless of 
the cause, fear-driven people often miss great opportunities 
because they’re afraid to venture out. Instead they play it safe, 
avoiding risks and trying to maintain the status quo. 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


28 


Fear is a self-imposed prison that will keep you from becoming 
what God intends for you to be. You must move against it with 
the weapons of faith and love. The Bible says, “Well-formed love 
banishes fear. Since fear is crippling, a fearful life—fear of death, 
fear of judgment—is one not yet fully formed in love.” A 

Many people are driven by materialism. Their desire to 
acquire becomes the whole goal of their lives. This drive to always 
want more is based on the misconceptions that having more will 
make me more happy, more important, and more secure, but all 
three ideas are untrue. Possessions only provide temporary 
happiness. Because things do not change, we eventually become 
bored with them and then want newer, bigger, better versions. 

It’s also a myth that if I get more, I will be more important. 
Self-worth and net worth are not the same. Your value is not 
determined by your valuables, and God says the most valuable 
things in life are not things! 

The most common myth about money is that having more will 
make me more secure. It won’t. Wealth can be lost instantly 
through a variety of uncontrollable factors. Real security can only 
be found in that which can never be taken from you—your 
relationship with God. 

Many people are driven by the need for approval. They 
allow the expectations of parents or 
spouses or children or teachers or 
friends to control their lives. Many 
adults are still trying to earn the 
approval of unpleasable parents. 

Others are driven by peer pressure, 
always worried by what others 
might think. Unfortunately, those 
who follow the crowd usually get 
lost in it. 

I don’t know all the keys to success, but one key to failure is to 
try to please everyone. Being controlled by the opinions of others 


- 

Nothing matters more than 
knowing God’s purposes for your 
life, and nothing can compensate 
for not knowing them. 

— - 


What on Earth Am I Here For? 


29 



is a guaranteed way to miss God’s purposes for your life. Jesus 
said, “No one can serve Wo masters.” z 

There are other forces that can drive your life but all lead to the 
same dead end: unused potential, unnecessary stress, and an 
unfulfilled life. 

This forty-day journey will show you how to live a purpose- 
driven life—a life guided, controlled, and directed by God’s 
purposes. Nothing matters more than knowing God’s purposes 
for your life, and nothing can compensate for not knowing 
them—not success, wealth, fame, or pleasure. Without a 
purpose, life is motion without meaning, activity without 
direction, and events without reason. Without a purpose, life is 
trivial, petty, and pointless. 

The Benefits of Purpose-Driven Living 

There are five great benefits of living a purpose-driven life: 

Knowing your purpose gives meaning to your life. We were 
made to have meaning. This is why people try dubious methods, 
like astrology or psychics, to discover it. When life has meaning, 
you can bear almost anything; without it, nothing is bearable. 

A young man in his twenties wrote, “I feel like a failure 
because I’m struggling to become something, and I don’t even 
know what it is. All I know how to do is to get by. 
Someday, if I discover my purpose, I’ll feel I’m 
beginning to live.” 

Without God, life has no purpose, and without 
purpose, life has no meaning. Without meaning, life 
has no significance or hope. In the Bible, many 
different people expressed this hopelessness. Isaiah 
complained, “I have labored to no purpose; I have spent my strength 
in vain and for nothing,” 6 Job said, “My life drags by—day after 
hopeless day” 7 and “I give up; I am tired of living. Leave me alone. 
My life makes no sense. ” s The greatest tragedy is not death, but life 
without purpose. 


DAY THREE: 

WHAT 

DRIVES 

YOUR 

LIFE? 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


30 


Hope is as essential to your life as air and water. You need hope 
to cope. Dr. Bernie Siegel found he could predict which of his 
cancer patients would go into remission by asking, “Do you want 
to live to be one hundred?” Those with a deep 
sense of life purpose answered yes and were 
the ones most likely to survive. Hope comes 
from having a purpose. 

If you have felt hopeless, hold on! 

Wonderful changes are going to happen in 
your life as you begin to live it on purpose. C 
says, “I know what I am planning for you.... ‘I have 
good plans for you, not plans to hurt you. I will give you hope and a 
good future.’” 9 You may feel you are facing an impossible 
situation, but the Bible says, “God ... is able to do far more than 
we would ever dare to ask or even dream of—infinitely beyond our 
highest prayers, desires, thoughts, or hopes.” 10 

Knowing your purpose simplifies your life. It defines what 
you do and what you don’t do. Your purpose becomes the 
standard you use to evaluate which activities are essential and 
which aren’t. You simply ask, “Does this activity help me fulfill 
one of God’s purposes for my life?” 

Without a clear purpose you have no foundation on which you 
base decisions, allocate your time, and use your resources. You 
will tend to make choices based on circumstances, pressures, and 
your mood at that moment. People who don’t know their 
purpose try to do too much—and that causes stress, fatigue, and 
conflict. 

It is impossible to do everything people want you to do. You 
have just enough time to do God’s will. If you can’t get it all 
done, it means you’re trying to do more than God intended for 
you to do (or, possibly, that you’re watching too much 
television). Purpose-driven living leads to a simpler lifestyle and a 
saner schedule. The Bible says, “A pretentious, showy life is an 
empty life; a plain and simple life is a full life.” 11 It also leads to 



What on Earth Am I Here For? 


3i 


peace of mind: “You, Lord, give perfect peace to those who keep their 
purpose firm and put their trust in you. ” 12 

Knowing your purpose focuses your life. It concentrates 
your effort and energy on what’s important. You become effective 
by being selective. 

It’s human nature to get distracted by minor issues. We play 
Trivial Pursuit with our lives. Henry David Thoreau observed 
that people live lives of “quiet desperation,” but today a better 
description is aimless distraction. Many people are like gyroscopes, 
spinning around at a frantic pace but never going anywhere. 

Without a clear purpose, you will keep changing directions, 
jobs, relationships, churches, or other externals—hoping each 
change will settle the confusion or fill the emptiness in your heart. 
You think, Maybe this time it will be different, but it doesn’t solve 
your real problem—a lack of focus and purpose. 

The Bible says, “Don’t live carelessly, unthinkingly. Make sure 
you understand what the Master wants. ” u 

The power of focusing can be seen in light. Diffused light has 
little power or impact, but you can concentrate its energy by 
focusing it. With a magnifying glass, the rays of the sun can be 
focused to set grass or paper on fire. When light is focused even 
more as a laser beam, it can cut through steel. 

There is nothing quite as potent 
as a focused life, one lived on 
purpose. The men and women who 
have made the greatest difference in 
history were the most focused. For 
instance, the apostle Paul almost 
single-handedly spread Christianity 


----- 

if you want your life to have 
impact, focus it! 

— - 


throughout the Roman Empire. His secret was a focused life. He 
said, “I am focusing all my energies on this one thing: Forgetting the 
past and looking forward to what lies ahead .” 14 

If you want your life to have impact, focus it! Stop dabbling. 
Stop trying to do it all. Do less. Prune away even good activities 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


32 



and do only that which matters most. Never confuse activity with 
productivity. You can be busy without a purpose, but what’s the 
point? Paul said, “Let’s keep focused on that goal, those of us who 
want everything God has for us.” 15 

Knowing your purpose motivates your life. Purpose always 
produces passion. Nothing energizes like a clear purpose. On the 
other hand, passion dissipates when you lack a purpose. Just 
getting out of bed becomes a major ^ ^^ 

chore. It is usually meaningless 
work, not overwork, that wears us 
down, saps our strength, and robs 
our joy. 

George Bernard Shaw wrote, 

“This is the true joy of life: the 
being used up for a purpose 
recognized by yourself as a mighty one; being a force of nature 
instead of a feverish, selfish little clot of ailments and grievances, 
complaining that the world will not devote itself to making you 
happy.” 

Knowing your purpose prepares you for eternity. Many 
people spend their lives trying to create a lasting legacy on earth. 
They want to be remembered when they’re gone. Yet, what 
ultimately matters most will not be what others say about your life 
but what God says. What people fail to realize is that all 
achievements are eventually surpassed, records are broken, 
reputations fade, and tributes are forgotten. In college, James 
Dobson’s goal was to become the school’s tennis champion. He 
felt proud when his trophy was prominently placed in the school’s 
trophy cabinet. Years later, someone mailed h im that trophy. They 
had found it in a trashcan when the school was remodeled. Jim 
said, “Given enough time, all your trophies will be trashed by 
someone else!” 

Living to create an earthly legacy is a short-sighted goal. A 
wiser use of time is to build an eternal legacy. You weren’t put 


You weren’t put on earth to he 
remembered. You were put 
here to prepare for eternity. 

— - 


What on Earth Am I Here For? 


33 



on earth to be remembered. You were put here to prepare for 
eternity. 

One day you will stand before God, and he will do an audit of 
your life, a final exam, before you enter eternity. The Bible says, 
“Remember, each of us will stand personally before the judgment seat 
of God.... Tes, each of us will have to give a personal account to 
God.” lb Fortunately, God wants us to pass this test, so he has 
given us the questions in advance. From the Bible we can surmise 
that God will ask us two crucial questions: 

First, “What did you do with my Son, Jesus Christ?” God won’t 
ask about your religious background or doctrinal views. The only 
thing that will matter is, did you accept what Jesus did for you 
and did you learn to love and trust him? Jesus said, “I am the way 
and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except 
through me.” 17 

Second, “What did you do with what I gave you ?” What did 
you do with your life—all the gifts, talents, 
opportunities, energy, relationships, and 
resources God gave you? Did you spend 
them on yourself, or did you use them for 
the purposes God made you for?” 

Preparing you for these two questions is 
the goal of this book. The first question will 
determine where you spend eternity. The second question 
will determine what you do in eternity. By the end of this book 
you will be ready to answer both questions. 



The Purpose-Driven Life 


34 


—. - 


Day Three 

Thinking about My Purpose 

Point to Ponder: Living on purpose is the path to 
peace. 

Verse to Remember: “You, Lord, give perfect peace to 
those who keep their purpose firm and put their trust in 
you” Isaiah 26:3 (TEV) 


Question to Consider: What would my family and 
friends say is the driving force of my life? What do I 
want it to be? 

^ 


What on Earth Am I Here For? 


35 











Made to Last Forever 


God has... planted eternity 
in the human heart. 

Ecclesiastes 3:11 (NLT) 

Surely God would not have created such 
a being as man to exist only for a day! 
No, no, man was made for immortality. 

Abraham Lincoln 


This life is not all there is. 

Life on earth is just the dress rehearsal before the real 
production. You will spend far more time on the other side of 
death —in eternity —than you will here. Earth is the staging area, 
the preschool, the tryout for your life in eternity. It is the practice 
workout before the actual game; the warm-up lap before the race 
begins. This life is preparation for the next. 

At most, you will live a hundred years on earth, but you will 
spend forever in eternity. Your time on earth is, as Sir Thomas 
Browne said, “but a small parenthesis in eternity.” You were made 
to last forever. 

The Bible says, “God has ... planted eternity in the human 
heart. ” 1 You have an inborn instinct that longs for immortality. 
This is because God designed you, in his image, to live for 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


36 


eternity. Even though we know everyone eventually dies, death 
always seems unnatural and unfair. The reason we feel we should 
live forever is that God wired our brains with that desire! 

One day your heart will stop beating. That will be the end of 
your body and your time on earth, but it will not be the end of 
you. Your earthly body is just a temporary residence for your 
spirit. The Bible calls your earthly body a “tent,” but refers to 
your future body as a “house.” The Bible says, “When this tent we 
live in—our body here on earth—is torn down, God will have a 
house in heaven for us to live in, a home he himself has made, which 
will last forever ” 2 

While life on earth offers many choices, eternity offers only 
two: heaven or hell. Your relationship to God on earth will 
determine your relationship to him in eternity. If you learn to love 
and trust God’s Son, Jesus, you will be invited to spend the rest 
of eternity with him. On the other hand, if you reject his love, 
forgiveness, and salvation, you will spend eternity apart from God 
forever. 

C. S. Lewis said, “There are two kinds of people: those who say 
to God c Thy will be done 3 and those to whom God says, ‘All right 
then, have it your way.’” Tragically, many people will have to 
endure eternity without God because they chose to live without 
him here on earth. 

When you fully comprehend that there is more to life than just 
here and now, and you realize that life is just preparation for 
eternity, you will begin to live 
differently. You will start living in 
light of eternity, and that will color 
how you handle every relationship, 
task, and circumstance. Suddenly 
many activities, goals, and even 
problems that seemed so important 
will appear trivial, petty, and unworthy of your attention. The closer 
you live to God, the smaller everything else appears. 


- 

This life is preparation 
for the next. 

— - 


What on Earth Am I Here For? 


37 



When you live in light of eternity, your values change. You use 
your time and money more wisely. You place a higher premium 
on relationships and character instead of fame or wealth or 
achievements or even fun. Your priorities are reordered. Keeping 
up with trends, fashions, and popular values just doesn’t matter as 
much anymore. Paul said, “I once thought all these things were so 
very important, but now I consider them worthless because of what 
Christ has done. ” 3 

If your time on earth were all there is to your life, I would 
suggest you start living it up immediately. You could forget being 
good and ethical, and you wouldn’t have to worry about any 
consequences of your actions. You could indulge yourself in total 
self-centeredness because your actions would have no long-term 


repercussions. But— and this makes 
all the difference —death is not the 
end of you! Death is not your 
termination, but your transition 
into eternity, so there are eternal 
consequences to everything you do 
on earth. Every act of our lives 


- 


When you live in light of 
eternity, your values change. 


■ 


strikes some chord that will vibrate in eternity. 

The most damaging aspect of contemporary living is short¬ 
term thinking. To make the most of your life, you must keep the 
vision of eternity continually in your mind and the value of it in 
your heart. There’s far more to life than just here and now! Today 
is the visible tip of the iceberg. Eternity is all the rest you don’t 
see underneath the surface. 

What is it going to be like in eternity with God? Frankly, the 
capacity of our brains cannot handle the wonder and greatness of 
heaven. It would be like trying to describe the Internet to an ant. 
It’s futile. Words have not been invented that could possibly 
convey the experience of eternity. The Bible says, “No mere man 
has ever seen, heard or even imagined what wonderful things God 
has ready for those who love the Lord T 4 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


38 



However, God has given us glimpses of eternity in his Word. 
We know that right now God is preparing an eternal home for us. 
In heaven we will be reunited with loved ones who are believers, 
released from all pain and suffering, rewarded for our 
faithfulness on earth, and reassigned to do work that 
we will enjoy doing. We won’t he around on clouds 
with halos playing harps! We will enjoy unbroken 
fellowship with God, and he will enjoy us for an 
unlimited, endless forever. One day Jesus will say, 

“Come, you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the 
kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world.” 5 

C. S. Lewis captured the concept of eternity on the last page of 
the Chronicles of Narnia, his seven-book children’s fiction series: 
“For us this is the end of all the stories. . . . But for them it was 
only the beginning of the real story. All their life in this world . . . 
had only been the cover and the title page: now at last they were 
beginning Chapter One of the Great Story, which no one on 
earth has read, which goes on forever and in which every chapter 
is better than the one before.” 6 

God has a purpose for your life on earth, but it doesn’t end 
here. His plan involves far more than the few decades you will 
spend on this planet. It’s more than “the opportunity of a 
lifetime”; God offers you an opportunity beyond your lifetime. 

The Bible says, “[God’s] plans endure forever; his purposes last 
eternally.” 7 

The only time most people think about eternity is at funerals, 
and then it’s often shallow, sentimental thinking, based on 
ignorance. You may feel it’s morbid to think about death, but 
actually it’s unhealthy to live in denial of death and not consider 
what is inevitable. 8 Only a fool would go through life unprepared 
for what we all know will eventually happen. You need to think 
more about eternity, not less. 

Just as the nine months you spent in your mother’s womb were 
not an end in themselves but preparation for life, so this life is 


DAY FOUR: 

MADE TO 
LAST 
FOREVER 


What on Earth Am I Here For? 


39 


preparation for the next. If you have a relationship with God 
through Jesus, you don’t need to fear death. It is the door to 
eternity. It will be the last hour of your time on earth, but it 

won’t be the last of you. Rather than being the 
end of your life, it will be your birthday into 
eternal life. The Bible says, “This world is not 
our home; we are looking forward to our 
everlasting home in heaven.” 9 
Measured against eternity, our time on 
earth is just a blink of an eye, but the 
consequences of it will last forever. The deeds of this life 
are the destiny of the next. We should be “realizing that every 
moment we spend in these earthly bodies is time spent away from our 
eternal home in heaven with Jesus.” 10 Years ago a popular slogan 
encouraged people to live each day as “the first day of the rest of 
your life.” Actually, it would be wiser to live each day as if it were 
the last day of your life. Matthew Henry said, “It ought to be the 
business of every day to prepare for our final day.” 



■ — 


Day Four 

Thinking about My Purpose 


Point to Ponder: There is more to life than just here 
and now. 

I N 

I 

Verse to Remember: “This world is fading away, along 
with everything it craves. Tut if you do the will of God, you 
j will live forever.” 1 John 2:17 (NTT) ’ 

Question to Consider: Since I was made to last 
forever, what is the one thing I should stop doing and 

| 

the one thing I should start doing today? 

-- ---’Q3M- 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


40 









Seeing Life from God’s View 

What is your life> 

James 4:14b (NIV) 

We don’t see things as they are, 
we see them as we are. 

Anai's Nin 


The way you see your life shapes your life. 

How you define life determines your destiny. Your perspective 
will influence how you invest your time, spend your money, use 
your talents, and value your relationships. 

One of the best ways to understand other people is to ask 
them, “How do you see your life?” You will discover that there are 
as many different answers to that question as there are people. 

I’ve been told life is a circus, a minefield, a roller coaster, a puzzle, 
a symphony, a journey, and a dance. People have said, “Life is a 
carousel: Sometimes you’re up, sometimes you’re down, and 
sometimes you just go round and round” or “life is a ten-speed 
bicycle with gears we never use” or “life is a game of cards: You 
have to play the hand you are dealt.” 

If I asked how you picture life, what image would come to your 
mind? That image is your life metaphor. It’s the view of life that 


What on Earth Am I Here For? 


41 


you hold, consciously or unconsciously, in your mind. It’s your 
description of how life works and what you expect from it. People 
often express their life metaphors through clothes, jewelry, cars, 
hairstyles, bumper stickers, even tattoos. 

Your unspoken life metaphor influences your life more than 
you realize. It determines your expectations, your values, your 
relationships, your goals, and your priorities. For instance, if you 
think life is a party, your primary value in life will be having fun. If 
you see life as a race, you will value speed and will probably be in a 
hurry much of the time. If you view life as a marathon, you will 
value endurance. If you see life as a battle or a game, winning will 
be very important to you. 

What is your view of life? You may be basing your life on a 
faulty life metaphor. To fulfill the purposes God made you for, 
you will have to challenge conventional wisdom and 
replace it with the biblical metaphors of life. The Bible 
says, “Do not conform yourselves to the standards of this 
world, but let God transform you inwardly by a complete 
change of your mind. Then you will be able to know the 
will of God.” 1 

The Bible offers three metaphors that teach us 
God’s view of life: Life is a test, life is a trust, and life is 
a temporary assignment. These ideas are the foundation of 
purpose-driven living. We will look at the first two in this chapter 
and the third one in the next. 

Life on earth is a Test. This life metaphor is seen in stories 
throughout the Bible. God continually tests people’s character, 
faith, obedience, love, integrity, and loyalty. Words like trials, 
temptations, refining, and testing occur more than 200 times in 
the Bible. God tested Abraham by asking him to offer his son 
Isaac. God tested Jacob when he had to work extra years to earn 
Rachel as his wife. 

Adam and Eve failed their test in the Garden of Eden, and 
David failed his tests from God on several occasions. But the 


DAY FIVE: 

SEEING 

LIFE 

FROM 

GOD’S 

VIEW 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


42 


Bible also gives us many examples of people who passed a great 
test, such as Joseph, Ruth, Esther, and Daniel. 

Character is both developed and revealed by tests, and all of 
life is a test. You are always being tested. God constantly watches 
your response to people, problems, success, conflict, illness, 
disappointment, and even the weather! He even watches the 
simplest actions such as when you 
open a door for others, when you 
pick up a piece of trash, or when 
you’re polite toward a clerk or 
waitress. 

We don’t know all the tests God 
will give you, but we can predict 
some of them, based on the Bible. 

You will be tested by major changes, delayed promises, impossible 
problems, unanswered prayers, undeserved criticism, and even 
senseless tragedies. In my own life I have noticed that God tests 
my faith through problems, tests my hope by how I handle 
possessions, and tests my love through people. 

A very important test is how you act when you can’t feel God’s 
presence in your life. Sometimes God intentionally draws back, 
and we don’t sense his closeness. A Icing named Hezekiah 
experienced this test. The Bible says, “God withdrew from 
Hezekiah in order to test him and to see what was really in his 
heart.” 2 Hezekiah had enjoyed a close fellowship with God, but at 
a crucial point in his life God left him alone to test his character, 
to reveal a weakness, and to prepare him for more responsibility. 

When you understand that life is a test, you realize that nothing 
is insignificant in your life. Even the smallest incident has 
significance for your character development. Every day is an 
important day, and every second is a growth opportunity to 
deepen your character, to demonstrate love, or to depend on 
God. Some tests seem overwhelming, while others you don’t even 
notice. But all of them have eternal implications. 


Character is both developed 
and revealed by tests, 
and all of life is a test. 

■ 


What on Earth Am I Here For? 


43 



The good news is that God wants you to pass the tests of life, 
so he never allows the tests you face to be greater than the grace 
he gives you to handle them. The Bible says, “God keeps 
his promise, and he will not allow you to be tested 
beyond your power to remain firm; at the time 
you are put to the test, he will give you the 
strength to endure it, and so provide you with 
a way out,” 3 

Every time you pass a test, God notices and 
makes plans to reward you in eternity. James says, 
“Blessed are those who endure when they are tested. When they pass 
the test, they will receive the crown of life that God has promised to 
those who love him.” 4 

Life on earth is a Trust. This is the second biblical metaphor 
of life. Our time on earth and our energy, intelligence, 
opportunities, relationships, and resources are all gifts from God 
that he has entrusted to our care and management. We are 
stewards of whatever God gives us. This concept of stewardship 
begins with the recognition that God is the owner of everything 
and everyone on earth. The Bible says, “The world and all that is 
in it belong to the Lord; the earth and all who live on it are his.” 3 

We never really own anything during our brief stay on earth. 
God just loans the earth to us while we’re here. It was God’s 
property before you arrived, and God will loan it to someone else 
after you die. You just get to enjoy it for a while. 

When God created Adam and Eve, he entrusted the care of his 
creation to them and appointed them trustees of his property. 

The Bible says, “[God] blessed them, and said, ‘Have many 
children, so that your descendants will live all over the earth and 
bring it under their control. I am putting you in charge.’” 6 

The first job God gave humans was to manage and take care of 
God’s “stuff” on earth. This role has never been rescinded. It is a 
part of our purpose today. Everything we enjoy is to be treated as 
a trust that God has placed in our hands. The Bible says, “What do 



The Purpose-Driven Life 


44 



you have that God hasn’t given you 7 . And if all you have is from God, 
why boast as though you have accomplished something on your own 7 .” 1 

Years ago, a couple let my wife and me use their beautiful, 
beach-front home in Hawaii for a vacation. It was an experience 
we could never have afforded, and we enjoyed it immensely. We 
were told, “Use it just like it’s yours,” so we did! We swam in the 
pool, ate the food in the refrigerator, used the bath towels and 
dishes, and even jumped on the beds in fun! But we knew all 
along that it wasn’t really ours, so we took special care of 
everything. We enjoyed the benefits of using the home without 
owning it. 

Our culture says, “If you don’t own it, you won’t take care of 
it.” But Christians live by a higher standard: “Because God owns 
it, I must take the best care of it that I can.” The Bible says, 

“Those who are trusted with something valuable must show they are 
worthy of that trust.”* Jesus often referred to life as a trust and 
told many stories to illustrate this responsibility toward God. In 
the story of the talents, 9 a businessman entrusts his wealth to the 
care of his servants while he’s away. When he returns, he evaluates 
each servant’s responsibility and rewards them accordingly. The 
owner says, “Well done, good and faithful servant! Ton have been 
faithful with a few things; I will put 
you in charge of many things. Come 
and share your master’s happiness. ” 10 

At the end of your life on earth 
you will be evaluated and rewarded 
according to how well you handled 
what God entrusted to you. That 
means everything you do, even 
simple daily chores, has eternal implications. If you treat 
everything as a trust, God promises three rewards in eternity. 

First, you will be given God’s affirmation: He will say, “Good 
job! Well done!” Next, you will receive a promotion and be given 
greater responsibility in eternity: “I will put you in charge of 


The more God gives you, 
the more responsible he 
expects you to be. 

— - 


What on Earth Am I Here For? 


45 



many things.” Then you will be honored with a celebration: 
“Come and share your Master’s happiness.” 

Most people fail to realize that money is both a test and a trust 
from God. God uses finances to teach us to trust him, and for 
many people, money is the greatest test of all. God watches how 
we use money to test how trustworthy we are. The Bible says, “If 
you are untrustworthy about worldly wealth, who will trust you with 
the true riches of heaven?” 11 

This is a very important truth. God says there is a direct 
relationship between how I use my money and the quality of my 
spiritual life. How I manage my money (“worldly wealth”) 
determines how much God can trust me with spiritual blessings 
{“true riches”). Let me ask you: Is the way you manage your 
money preventing God from doing more in your life? Can you be 
trusted with spiritual riches? 

Jesus said, “From everyone who has been given much, much will be 
demanded; and from the one who has been entrusted with much, 
much more will be asked.” 11 Life is a test and a trust, and the more 
God gives you, the more responsible he expects you to be. 


Day Five 

Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: Life is a test and a trust. 

I 

Verse to Remember: “Unless you are faithful in small 
matters, you won’t be faithful in large ones.” 

Luke 16:10a (NLT) 

Question to Consider: What has happened to me 
recently that I now realize was a test from God? What 
are the greatest matters God has entrusted to me? 

- , __ ____ 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


46 







Life Is a Temporary 
Assignment 

Lord, remind me how brief my time on 
earth will he. Remind me that my days are 
numbered, and that my life is feeing away. 
Psalm 39:4 (NLT) 

I am here on earth for just a little while. 

Psalm 119:19 (TEV) 


Life on earth is a temporary assignment. 

The Bible is full of metaphors that teach about the brief, 
temporary, transient nature of life on earth. Life is described as 
a mist, a fast runner, a breath, and a wisp of smoke. The Bible says, 
“For we were born but yesterday.... Our days on earth are as 
transient as a shadow.” 1 

To make the best use of your life, you must never forget two 
truths: First, compared with eternity, life is extremely brief. 

Second, earth is only a temporary residence. You won’t be here 
long, so don’t get too attached. Ask God to help you see life on 
earth as he sees it. David prayed, “Lord, help me to realize how brief 
my time on earth will be. Help me to know that I am here for but a 
moment more.” 2 


What on Earth Am I Here For? 


47 


Repeatedly the Bible compares life on earth to temporarily 
living in a foreign country. This is not your permanent home or 
final destination. You’re just passing through, just visiting earth. 
The Bible uses terms like alien, pilgrim, foreigner, stranger, 
visitor, and traveler to describe our brief stay on earth. David 
said, “I am but a foreigner here on earth,” 3 and Peter explained, 
“If you call God your Father, live your time as temporary residents 
on earth.” 4 

In California, where I live, many people have moved from 
other parts of the world to work here, but they keep their 
citizenship with their home country. They are required to carry a 
visitor registration card (called a “green card”), which allows 
them to work here even though they aren’t citizens. Christians 
should carry spiritual green cards to remind us that our 
citizenship is in heaven. God says his children are to think 
differently about life from the way unbelievers do. “All they think 
about is this life here on earth. But we are citizens of heaven, where 
the Lord Jesus Christ lives. ” 5 Real believers understand that there is 
far more to life than just the few years we live on this planet. 

Your identity is in eternity, and your homeland is heaven. When 
you grasp this truth, you will stop worrying about “having it all” 

on earth. God is very blunt about 
the danger of living for the here and 
now and adopting the values, 
priorities, and lifestyles of the world 
around us. When we flirt with the 
temptations of this world, God calls 
it spiritual adultery. The Bible says, 
“You’re cheating on God. If all you want is your own way, flirting 
with the world every chance you get, you end up enemies of God and 
his way.” 6 

Imagine if you were asked by your country to be an 
ambassador to an enemy nation. You would probably have to 
learn a new language and adapt to some customs and cultural 


-- — - 

Your identity is in eternity, and 
your homeland is heaven. 

— - 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


48 



differences in order to be polite and to accomplish your mission. 
As an ambassador you would not be able to isolate yourself from 
the enemy. To fulfill your mission, you would have to have 
contact and relate to them. 

But suppose you became so comfortable with this foreign 
country that you fell in love with it, preferring it to your 
homeland. Your loyalty and commitment would 
change. Your role as an ambassador would be 
compromised. Instead of representing your 
home country, you would start acting like the 
enemy. You’d be a traitor. 

The Bible says, “We are Christ’s ambassadors.” 7 
Sadly, many Christians have betrayed their King 
and his kingdom. They have foolishly concluded that because 
they live on earth, it’s their home. It is not. The Bible is clear: 
“Friends, this world is not your home, so don’t make yourselves cozy 
in it. Don’t indulge your ego at the expense ofyour soul.” 8 God 
warns us to not get too attached to what’s around us because it is 
temporary. We’re told, “Those infrequent contact with the things of 
the world should makegood use of them without becoming attached 
to them, for this world and all it contains will pass away. ” 9 

Compared with other centuries, life has never been easier for 
much of the Western world. We are constandy entertained, 
amused, and catered to. With all the fascinating attractions, 
mesmerizing media, and enjoyable experiences available today, it’s 
easy to forget that the pursuit of happiness is not what life is 
about. Only as we remember that life is a test, a trust, and a 
temporary assignment will the appeal of these things lose their 
grip on our lives. We are preparing for something even better. 

“The things we see now are here today, gone tomorrow. But the things 
we can’t see now will last forever.” 10 

The fact that earth is not our ultimate home explains why, as 
followers of Jesus, we experience difficulty, sorrow, and rejection 
in this world. 11 It also explains why some of God’s promises seem 


DAY SIX: 

LIFE ISA 
TEMPORARY 
ASSIGNMENT 


What on Earth Am I Here For? 


49 


unfulfilled, some prayers seem unanswered, and some 
circumstances seem unfair. This is not the end of the story. 

In order to keep us from becoming too attached to earth, God 
allows us to feel a significant amount of discontent and 
dissatisfaction in life—longings that will never be fulfilled on this 
side of eternity. We’re not completely happy here because we’re 
not supposed to be! Earth is not our final home; we were created 
for something much better. 

A fish would never be happy living on land, because it was 
made for water. An eagle could never feel satisfied if it wasn’t 

allowed to fly. You will never feel 
completely satisfied on earth, 
because you were made for more. 
You will have happy moments here, 
but nothing compared with what 
God has planned for you. 

Realizing that life on earth is just 
a temporary assignment should 
radically alter your values. Eternal values, not temporal ones, 
should become the deciding factors for your decisions. As C. S. 
Lewis observed, “All that is not eternal is eternally useless.” The 
Bible says, “We fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is 
unseen. For what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is 
eternal.” 12 

It is a fatal mistake to assume that God’s goal for your life is 
material prosperity or popular success, as the world defines it. The 
abundant life has nothing to do with material abundance, and 
faithfulness to God does not guarantee success in a career or even 
in ministry. Never focus on temporary crowns. 13 

Paul was faithful, yet he ended up in prison. John the Baptist 
was faithful, but he was beheaded. Millions of faithful people 
have been martyred, have lost everything, or have come to the 
end of life with nothing to show for it. But the end of life is not 
the end! 


-—-- 

Earth is not our final home; 
we were created for 
something much better. 

— - 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


50 



In God’s eyes, the greatest heroes of faith are not those who 
achieve prosperity, success, and power in this life, but those who 
treat this life as a temporary assignment and serve 
faithfully, expecting their promised reward in 
eternity. The Bible says this about God’s 
Hall of Fame: “All these gnat people died in 
faith. They did not get the things that God 
promised his people, but they saw them coming 
far in the future and were glad. They said they 
were like visitors and strangers on earth.... they were 
waiting for a better country—a heavenly country. So God is not 
ashamed to be called their God, because he has prepared a city for 
them. ” 14 Your time on earth is not the complete story of your life. 
You must wait until heaven for the rest of the chapters. It takes 
faith to live on earth as a foreigner. 

An old story is often repeated of a retiring missionary coming 
home to America on the same boat as the president of the United 
States. Cheering crowds, a military band, a red carpet, banners, 
and the media welcomed the president home, but the missionary 
slipped off the ship unnoticed. Feeling self-pity and resentment, 
he began complaining to God. Then God gendy reminded him, 
“But my child, you’re not home yet.” 

You will not be in heaven two seconds before you cry out, 

“ Why did I place so much importance on things that were so 
temporary? What was I thinking? Why did I waste so much time, 
energy, and concern on what wasn’t going to last?” 

When life gets tough, when you’re overwhelmed with doubt, 
or when you wonder if living for Christ is worth the effort, 
remember that you are not home yet. At death you won’t leave 
home—you’ll go home. 



What on Earth Am I Here For? 


5i 


- 


1 


Day Six 

Thinking about My Purpose 

| 

Point to Ponder: This world is not my home. 

I 

Verse to Remember: “So we fix our eyes not on what is 
seen, but on what is unseen. For what is seen is temporary, 
but what is unseen is eternal.” 2 Corinthians 4:18 (NIV) 

Question to Consider: How should the fact that life 
on earth is just a temporary assignment change the way 
I am living right now? 

\ _ ‘ 

, _ _ . ______ 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


52 










The Reason for Everything 

Everything comes from God alone. 

Everything lives by his power, 
and everything is for his glory. 

Romans 1136 (LB) 

The Lord has made everything 
for his own purposes. 

Proverbs 16:4 (NLT) 


It’s all for him. 

The ultimate goal of the universe is to show the glory of God. 
It is the reason for everything that exists, including you. God 
made it all for his glory. Without God’s glory, there would be 
nothing. 

What is the glory of God? It is who God is. It is the essence of 
his nature, the weight of his importance, the radiance of his 
splendor, the demonstration of his power, and the atmosphere of 
his presence. God’s glory is the expression of his goodness and all 
his other intrinsic, eternal qualities. 

Where is the glory of God? Just look around. Everything 
created by God reflects his glory in some way. We see it 
everywhere, from the smallest microscopic form of life to the 
vast Milky Way, from sunsets and stars to storms and seasons. 


What on Earth Am I Here For? 


53 


Creation reveals our Creator’s glory. In nature we learn that God 
is powerful, that he enjoys variety, loves beauty, is organized, and 
is wise and creative. The Bible says, “The heavens declare the glory 
of God.” 1 

Throughout history, God has revealed his glory to people in 
different settings. He revealed it first in the Garden of Eden, then 

to Moses, then in the tabernacle 
and the temple, then through Jesus, 
and now through the church. 2 It 
was portrayed as a consuming fire, a 
cloud, thunder, smoke, and a 
brilliant light. 3 In heaven, God’s 
glory provides all the light needed. 
The Bible says, “The city does not 
need the sun or the moon to shine on it, for the glory of God gives it 
light.” 1 

God’s glory is best seen in Jesus Christ. He, the Light of the 
world, illuminates God’s nature. Because of Jesus, we are no 
longer in the dark about what God is really like. The Bible says, 
“The Son is the radiance of God’s glory. ” 5 Jesus came to earth so 
we could fully understand God’s glory. “The Word became human 
and lived among us. We saw his glory ... a glory full of grace and 
truth.” 6 

God’s inherent glory is what he possesses because he is God. It 
is his nature. We cannot add anything to this glory, just as it 
would be impossible for us to make the sun shine brighter. But 
we are commanded to recognize his glory, honor his glory, declare 
his glory, praise his glory, reflect his glory, and live for his glory. 7 
Why? Because God deserves it! We owe hi m every honor we can 
possibly give. Since God made all things, he deserves all the glory. 
The Bible says, “You are worthy, O Lord our God, to receive glory 
and honor and power. For you created everything.” & 

In the entire universe, only two of God’s creations fail to bring 
glory to him: fallen angels (demons) and us (people). All sin, at its 


- - - 

Livingfor God’s glory is the 
greatest achievement we can 
accomplish with our lives. 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


54 



root, is failing to give God glory. It is loving anything else more 
than God. Refusing to bring glory to God is prideful rebellion, 
and it is the sin that caused Satan’s fall—and ours, too. In 
different ways we have all lived for our own glory, not God’s. The 
Bible says, “All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” 9 

None of us have given God the full glory he deserves from out¬ 
lives. This is the worst sin and the biggest mistake we can make. 
On the other hand, living for God’s glory is the greatest 
achievement we can accomplish with our lives. God says, “They 
are my own people, and 1 created them to bring me glory,” 10 so it 
ought to be the supreme goal of our lives. 

How Can I Bring Glory to God? 

Jesus told the Father, “I brought glory to you here on earth by 
doing everything you told me to do.” 11 Jesus honored God by 
fulfilling his purpose on earth. We honor God the same way. 
When anything in creation fulfills its purpose, it brings glory to 
God. Birds bring glory to God by flying, chirping, nesting, and 
doing other bird-like activities that God intended. Even the lowly 
ant brings glory to God when it 
fulfills the purpose it was created 
for. God made ants to be ants, and 
he made you to be you. St. Irenaeus 
said, “The glory of God is a human 
being hilly alive!” 

There are many ways to bring 
glory to God, but they can be 
summarized in God’s hve purposes for your life. We will spend the 
rest of this book looking at them in detail, but here is an overview: 

We bring God glory by worshiping him. Worship is our first 
responsibility to God. We worship God by enjoying him. C. S. 
Lewis said, “In commanding us to glorify him, God is inviting us 
to enjoy him.” God wants our worship to be motivated by love, 
thanksgiving, and delight, not duty. 


W hen anything in creation 
fulfills its purpose, 
it brings glory to God. 


What on Earth Am I Here For? 


55 



DAY SEVEN: 

THE REASON 
FOR 

EVERYTHING 


John Piper notes, “God is most glorified in us when we are 
most satisfied in him.” 

Worship is far more than praising, singing, and praying to God. 
Worship is a lifestyle of enjoying God, loving him, and giving 
ourselves to be used for his purposes. When you use your life for 
God’s glory, everything you do can become an act of worship. 

The Bible says, “Use your whole body as a tool to do what is right for 
the glory of God. ” 12 

We bring God glory by loving other believers. When you 
were born again, you became a part of God’s family. Following 
Christ is not just a matter of believing; it also includes belonging 
and learning to love the family of God. John 
wrote, “Our love for each other proves that we 
have gone from death to life,” 13 Paul said, “Accept 
each other just as Christ has accepted you; then 
God will be glorified,” 14 

It is your responsibility to learn how to love as 
God does, because God is love, and it honors 
him. Jesus said, “As I have loved you, so you must love one another. 
By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one 
another\” 15 

We bring God glory by becoming like Christ. Once we are 
born into God’s family, he wants us to grow to spiritual maturity. 
What does that look like? Spiritual maturity is becoming like Jesus 
in the way we think, feel, and act. The more you develop 
Christlike character, the more you will bring glory to God. The 
Bible says, “As the Spirit of the Lord works within us, we become 
more and more like him and reflect his glory even more.” 16 

God gave you a new life and a new nature when you accepted 
Christ. Now, for the rest of your life on earth, God wants to 
continue the process of changing your character. The Bible says, 
“May you always be filled with the fruit of your salvation—those 
good things that are produced in your life by Jesus Christ—for this 
will bring much glory and praise to God.” 17 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


56 


We bring God glory by serving others with our gifts. Each 
of us was uniquely designed by God with talents, gifts, skills, and 
abilities. The way you’re “wired” is not an accident. God didn’t 
give you your abilities for selfish purposes. They were given to 
benefit others, just as others were given abilities for your benefit. 
The Bible says, “God has given gifts to each of you from his great 
variety of spiritual gifts. Manage them well so that God’s generosity 
can flow through you.... Are you called to help others? Do it with all 
the strength and energy that God supplies. Then God will be given 
glory .” 18 

We bring God glory by telling others about him. God 

doesn’t want his love and purposes kept a secret. Once we know 
the truth, he expects us to share it with others. This is a great 
privilege—introducing others to Jesus, helping them discover 
their purpose, and preparing them for their eternal destiny. The 
Bible says, “As God’s grace brings more and more people to 
Christ,... God will receive more and more glory.” 19 


What Will You Live for? 


Living the rest of your life for the glory of God will require a 
change in your priorities, your schedule, your relationships, and 
everything else. It will sometimes mean choosing a difficult path 
instead of an easy one. Even Jesus struggled with this. Knowing 
he was about to be crucified, he cried out: “My soul has become 
troubled; and what shall I say, ‘Father, save Me from this hour’? But 
for this purpose I came to this hour. Father, glorify 
Thy name.” 19 

Jesus stood at a fork in the road. Would 
he fulfill his purpose and bring glory to 
God, or would he shrink back and live a 
comfortable, self-centered life? You face the 
same choice. Will you live for your own goals, 
comfort, and pleasure, or will you live the rest of your life for 
God’s glory, knowing that he has promised eternal rewards? The 



What on Earth Am I Here For? 


57 


Bible says, “Anyone who holds on to life just as it is destroys that 
life. But if you let it go,... you’ll have it forever, real and 
eternal.” 21 

It’s time to settle this issue. Who are you going to live for— 
yourself or God? You may hesitate, wondering whether you will 
have strength to live for God. Don’t worry. God will give you 
what you need if you will just make the choice to live for him. 
The Bible says, “Everything that goes into a life of pleasing God has 
been miraculously given to us by getting to know, personally and 
intimately, the One who invited us to God.” 22 

Right now, God is inviting you to live for his glory by fulfilling 
the purposes he made you for. It’s really the only way to live. 
Everything else is just existing. Real life begins by committing 
yourself completely to Jesus Christ. If you are not sure you have 
done this, all you need to do is receive and believe. The Bible 
promises, “To all who received him, to those who believed in his 
name, he gave the right to become children of God.” 22 Will you 
accept God’s offer? 

First, believe. Believe God loves you and made you for his 
purposes. Believe you’re not an accident. Believe you were made 

to last forever. Believe God has 
chosen you to have a relationship 
with Jesus, who died on the cross 
for you. Believe that no matter 
what you’ve done, God wants to 
forgive you. 

Second, receive. Receive Jesus 
into your life as your Lord and Savior. Receive his forgiveness for 
your sins. Receive his Spirit, who will give you the power to fulfill 
your life purpose. The Bible says, “Whoever accepts and trusts the 
Son gets in on everything, life complete and for ever!” 24 Wherever 
you are reading this, I invite you to bow your head and quietly 
whisper the prayer that will change your eternity: “Jesus, I believe 
in you and I receive you.” Go ahead. 


--- 

Jesus will give you everything 
you need to live for him. 

— - 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


58 



If you sincerely meant that prayer, congratulations! Welcome to 
the family of God! You are now ready to discover and start living 
God’s purpose for your life. I urge you to tell someone about it. 
You’re going to need support. If you email me (see appendix 2), I 
will send you a little booklet I wrote called Tour First Steps for 
Spiritual Growth. 


•S- _ 


Day Seven 

Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: It’s all for him. 

Verse to Remember: a For everything comes from God 
alone. Everything lives by his power, and everything is for 
his glory.” Romans 11:36 (LB) 


1 


i 


i 


Question to Consider: Where in my daily routine can I 
become more aware of God’s glory? 

__.__ . 


What on Earth Am I Here For? 


59 









PURPOSE #i 



YOU WERE PLANNED 
FOR GOD’S PLEASURE 

For God has planted them like strong 
and graceful oaks for his own glory. 

Isaiah 61:3 (LB) 



Planned for God’s Pleasure 


You created everything, and it is for your 
pleasure that they exist and were created. 
Revelation 4:11 (NLT) 

The Lord takes pleasure in his people. 

Psalm 149:4a (TEV) 


You were planned for God’s pleasure. 

The moment you were born into the world, God was there as 
an unseen witness, smiling at your birth. He wanted you alive, 
and your arrival gave him great pleasure. God did not need to 
create you, but he chose to create you for his own enjoyment. You 
exist for his benefit, his glory, his purpose, and his delight. 

Bringing enjoyment to God, living for his pleasure, is the first 
purpose of your life. When you fully understand this truth, you 
will never again have a problem with feeling insignificant. It 
proves your worth. If you are that important to God, and he 
considers you valuable enough to keep with him for eternity, what 
greater significance could you have? You are a child of God, and 
you bring pleasure to God like nothing else he has ever created. 
The Bible says, “Because of his love God had already decided that 


PURPOSE #i; You Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


63 


through Jesus Christ he would make us his children—this was his 
pleasure and purpose. ” 1 

One of the greatest gifts God has given yon is the ability to 
enjoy pleasure. He wired you with five senses and emotions so 
you can experience it. He wants you to enjoy life, not just endure 
it. The reason you are able to enjoy pleasure is that God made 
you in his image. 

We often forget that God has emotions, too. He feels things 
very deeply. The Bible tells us that God grieves, gets jealous and 
angry, and feels compassion, pity, sorrow, and sympathy as well as 
happiness, gladness, and satisfaction. God loves, delights, gets 
pleasure, rejoices, enjoys, and even laughs! 2 

Bringing pleasure to God is called “worship.” The Bible 
says, “The Lord is pleased only with those who worship him and trust 
his love.”* 

Anything you do that brings pleasure to God is an act of 
worship. Like a diamond, worship is multifaceted. It would take 
volumes to cover all there is to understand about worship, but we 
will look at the primary aspects of worship in this section. 

Anthropologists have noted that worship is a universal urge, 
hard-wired by God into the very fiber of our being—an inbuilt 
need to connect with God. Worship is as natural as eating or 
breathing. If we fail to worship God, we always find a substitute, 

even if it ends up being ourselves. 
The reason God made us with this 
desire is that he desires worshipers! 
Jesus said, “The Father seeks 
worshipers. ” 4 

Depending on your religious 
background, you may need to 
expand your understanding of 
“worship.” You may think of church services with singing, 
praying, and listening to a sermon. Or you may think of 
ceremonies, candles, and communion. Or you may think of 


_ 

Anything you do that 
brings pleasure to God is 
an act of worship. 

— - 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


64 



healing, miracles, and ecstatic experiences. Worship can include 
these elements, but worship is far more than these expressions. 
Worship is a lifestyle. 

Worship is far more than music. For many people, worship is 
just a synonym for music. They say, “At our church we have the 
worship first, and then the teaching.” This is a big 
misunderstanding. Every part of a 
church service is an act of worship: 
praying, Scripture reading, singing, 
confession, silence, being still, 
listening to a sermon, taking notes, 
giving an offering, baptism, 
communion, signing a commitment 
card, and even greeting other worshipers. 

Actually, worship predates music. Adam worshiped in the 
Garden of Eden, but music isn’t mentioned until Genesis 4:21 
with the birth of Jubal. If worship were just music, then all who 
are nonmusical could never worship. Worship is far more than 
music. 

Even worse, “worship” is often misused to refer to a particular 
style of music: “First we sang a hymn, then a praise and worship 
song.” Or, “I like the fast praise songs but enjoy the slow worship 
songs the most.” In this usage, if a song is fast or loud or uses 
brass instruments, it’s considered “praise.” But if it is slow and 
quiet and intimate, maybe accompanied by guitar, that’s worship. 
This is a common misuse of the term “worship.” 

Worship has nothing to do with the style or volume or speed of 
a song. God loves all kinds of music because he invented it all— 
fast and slow, loud and soft, old and new. You probably don’t like 
it all, but God does! If it is offered to God in spirit and truth, it is 
an act of worship. 

Christians often disagree over the style of music used in 
worship, passionately defending their preferred style as the most 
biblical or God-honoring. But there is no biblical style! There are 


Worship is far more 
than music. 

— - 


PURPOSE #1: You Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


65 



no musical notes in the Bible; we don’t even have the instruments 
they used in Bible times. 

Frankly, the music style you like best says more about you — 
your background and personality—than it does about God. One 
ethnic group’s music can sound like noise to another. But God 
likes variety and enjoys it all. 

There is no such thing as “Christian” music; there are only 
Christian lyrics. It is the words that make a song sacred, not the 
tune. There are no spiritual tunes. If I played a song 
for you without the words, you’d have no way of 
knowing if it were a “Christian” song. 

Worship is not for your benefit. As a pastor, I 
receive notes that say, “I loved the worship today. 

I got a lot out of it.” This is another misconception 
about worship. It isn’t for our benefit! We worship 
for God’s benefit. When we worship, our goal is to bring pleasure 
to God, not ourselves. 

If you have ever said, “I didn’t get anything out of worship 
today,” you worshiped for the wrong reason. Worship isn’t for 
you. It’s for God. Of course, most “worship” services also include 
elements of fellowship, edification, and evangelism, and there arc 
benefits to worship, but we don’t worship to please ourselves. 

Our motive is to bring glory and pleasure to our Creator. 

In Isaiah 29 God complains about worship that is half-hearted 
and hypocritical. The people were offering God stale prayers, 
insincere praise, empty words, and man-made rituals without even 
thinking about the meaning. God’s heart is not touched by 
tradition in worship, but by passion and commitment. The Bible 
says, “These people come near to me with their mouth and honor me 
with their lips, but their hearts are far from me. Their worship of me 
is made up only of rules taught by men A 5 

Worship is not a part of your life; it is your life. Worship is 
not just for church services. We are told to “worship him 
continually” 6 and to “praise him from sunrise to sunset.” 7 In the 


DAY EIGHT: 

PLANNED 

FOR 

GOD’S 

PLEASURE 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


66 


Bible people praised God at work, at home, in battle, in jail, 
and even in bed! Praise should be the first activity when you open 
your eyes in the morning and the last activity when you close 
them at night. 8 David said, “I will thank the Lord at all times. My 
month will always praise him. ” 9 

Every activity can be transformed into an act of worship when 
you do it for the praise, glory, and pleasure of God. The Bible 
says, “So whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do it all for 
the glory of God.” 10 Martin Luther said, “A dairymaid can milk 
cows to the glory of God.” 

How is it possible to do everything to the glory of God? By 
doing everything as if you were doing it for Jesus and by carrying 
on a continual conversation with him while you do it. The Bible 
says, “Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working 
for the Lord, not for men.” 11 

This is the secret to a lifestyle of worship—doing everything as 
if you were doing it for Jesus. The Message paraphrase says, 

“Take your everyday, ordinary life—your sleeping, eating, going-to- 
work, and walking-around life—and place it before God as an 
offering.” 12 Work becomes worship when you 
dedicate it to God and perform it with an 
awareness of his presence. 

When I first fell in love with my wife, I thought 
of her constantly: while eating breakfast, driving to 
school, attending class, waiting in line at the 
market, pumping gas—I could not stop thinking 
about this woman! I often talked to myself about 
her and thought about all the things I loved about her. This 
helped me feel close to Kay even though we lived several hundred 
miles apart and attended different colleges. By constantly thinking 
of her, I was abiding in her love. This is what real worship is all 
about— falling in love with Jesus. 



PURPOSE #1: You Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


67 


l4*V - 


Day Eight 

Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: I was planned for God’s pleasure. 

Verse to Remember: “The Lord takes pleasure in his 
people.” Psalm 149:4a (TEV) 

I 

Question to Consider: What common task could I 
start doing as if I were doing it directly for Jesus? 




The Purpose-Driven Life 


68 








What Makes God Smile? 


May the Lord smile on you.... 

Numbers 6:25 (NLT) 

Smile on me, your servant; 
teach me the right way to live. 
Psalm 119:135 (Msg) 


The smile of God is the goal of your life. 

Since pleasing God is the first purpose of your life, your most 
important task is to discover how to do that. The Bible says, 
“Figure out what will please Christ, and then do it.” 1 Fortunately, 
the Bible gives us a clear example of a life that gives pleasure to 
God. The man’s name was Noah. 

In Noah’s day, the entire world had become morally bankrupt. 
Everyone lived for riieir own pleasure, not God’s. God couldn’t find 
anyone on earth interested in pleasing him, so he was grieved and 
regretted making man. God became so disgusted with the human 
race that he considered wiping it out. But there was one man who 
made God smile. The Bible says, “Noah was a pleasure to the Lord.” 2 

God said, “This guy brings me pleasure. He makes me smile. 
I’ll start over with his family.” Because Noah brought pleasure to 


PURPOSE #1: You Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


69 


God, you and I are alive today. From his life we learn the five acts 
of worship that make God smile. 

God smiles when we love him supremely. Noah loved God 
more than anything else in the world, even when no one else did! 
The Bible tells us that for his entire life, a Noah consistently 
followed God’s will and enjoyed a close relationship with Him.” 3 

This is what God wants most from you: a relationship! It’s the 
most astounding truth in the universe—that our Creator wants to 
fellowship witii us. God made you to love you, and he longs for 
you to love him back. He says, “I don’t want your sacrifices—I want 
your love; I don’t want your offerings—I want you to know me.” A 

Can you sense God’s passion for you in this verse? God deeply 
loves you and desires your love in return. He longs for you to 
know him and spend time with him. This is why learning to love 
God and be loved by him should be the greatest objective of your 
life. Nothing else comes close in importance. Jesus called it the 
greatest commandment. He said, “Love the Lord your God with all 
your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the 
first and greatest commandment.” 3 

God smiles when we trust him completely. The second 
reason Noah pleased God was that he trusted God, even when it 
didn’t make sense. The Bible says, “By faith, Noah built a ship in 

the middle of dry land. He was 
warned about something he couldn’t 
see, and acted on what he was 
told.... As a result, Noah became 
intimate with God.” 6 

Imagine this scene: One day God 
comes to Noah and says, “I’m 
disappointed in human beings. In the entire world, no one but 
you thinks about me. But Noah, when I look at you, I start 
smiling. I’m pleased with your life, so I’m going to flood the 
world and start over with your family. I want you to build a giant 
ship that will save you and the animals.” 


—--- 

W hat God wants most from 
you is a relationship. 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


70 



There were three problems that could have caused Noah to 
doubt. First, Noah had never seen rain, because prior to the 
Flood, God irrigated the earth from the ground up. 7 Second, 
Noah lived hundreds of miles from the nearest ocean. Even if he 
could learn to build a ship, how would he get it to water? Third, 
there was the problem of rounding up all the animals 
and then caring for them. But Noah didn’t 
complain or make excuses. He trusted God 
completely, and that made God smile. 

Trusting God completely means having faith 
that he knows what is best for your life. You 
expect him to keep his promises, help you with 
problems, and do the impossible when necessary. 

The Bible says, “He takes pleasure in those that honor Him; in those 
who trust in His constant love,” 8 

It took Noah 120 years to build the ark. I imagine he faced 
many discouraging days. With no sign of rain year after year, he 
was ruthlessly criticized as a “crazy man who thinks God speaks to 
him.” I imagine Noah’s children were often embarrassed by the 
giant ship being built in their front yard. Yet Noah kept on 
trusting God. 

In what areas of your life do you need to trust God completely? 
Trusting is an act of worship. Just as parents are pleased when 
children trust their love and wisdom, your faith makes God 
happy. The Bible says, “Without faith it is impossible to please 
God” 9 

God smiles when we obey him wholeheartedly. Saving the 
animal population from a worldwide flood required great attention 
to logistics and details. Everything had to be done just as God 
prescribed it. God didn’t say, “Build any old boat you’d like, 
Noah.” He gave very detailed instructions as to the size, shape, 
and materials of the ark as well as the different numbers of animals 
to be brought on board. The Bible tells us Noah’s response: “So 
Noah did everything exactly as God had commanded him.” 10 





PURPOSE #1: You Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


71 


Notice that Noah obeyed completely (no instruction was 
overlooked), and he obeyed exactly (in the way and time God 
wanted it done). That is wholeheartedness. It is no wonder God 
smiled on Noah. 

If God asked you to build a giant boat, don’t you think you 
might have a few questions, objections, or reservations? Noah 
didn’t. He obeyed God wholeheartedly. That means doing 
whatever God asks without reservation or hesitation. You don’t 
procrastinate and say, “I’ll pray about it.” You do it without delay. 
Every parent knows that delayed obedience is really disobedience. 

God doesn’t owe you an explanation or reason for everything 
he asks you to do. Understanding can wait, but obedience can’t. 
Instant obedience will teach you more about God than a lifetime 
of Bible discussions. In fact, you will never understand some 
commands until you obey them first. Obedience unlocks 
understanding. 

Often we try to offer God partial obedience. We want to pick 
and choose the commands we obey. We make a list of the 
commands we like and obey those while ignoring the ones we 
think are unreasonable, difficult, expensive, or unpopular. I’ll 

attend church but I won’t tithe. I’ll 
read my Bible but won’t forgive the 
person who hurt me. Yet partial 
obedience is disobedience. 

Wholehearted obedience is done 
joyfully, with enthusiasm. The Bible 
says, “Obey him gladly.” 11 This is 
the attitude of David: “Just tell me 
what to do and I will do it, Lord. As long as I live I’ll wholeheartedly 
obey. ” 12 

James, speaking to Christians, said, “We please God by what we 
do and not only by what we believe.” 1 * God’s Word is clear that you 
can’t earn your salvation. It comes only by grace, not your effort. 
But as a child of God you can bring pleasure to your heavenly 


—-- 

Trusting God completely 
means having faith that he 
knows what is best for your life. 

— - 


72 


The Purpose-Driven Life 



Father through obedience. Any act of obedience is also an act of 
worship. Why is obedience so pleasing to God? Because it proves 
you really love him. Jesus said, “If you love me, you will obey my 
commandments. ” 14 

God smiles when we praise and thank him continually. Few 

things feel better than receiving heartfelt praise and appreciation 
from someone else. God loves it, too. He smiles when we express 
our adoration and gratitude to him. 

Noah’s life brought pleasure to God because he lived with a 
heart of praise and thanksgiving. Noah’s first act after surviving 
the Flood was to express his thanks to God by offering a sacrifice. 
The Bible says, “Then Noah built an altar to the Lord ... and 
sacrificed burnt offerings on it.” 18 

Because of Jesus’ sacrifice, we don’t offer animal sacrifices as 
Noah did. Instead we are told to offer God “the sacrifice of 
praise” 16 and “the sacrifice of thanksgiving.” 17 We praise God for 
who he is, and we thank God for what he has done. David said, “I 
will praise God’s name in song and glorify him with thanksgiving. 
This will please the Lord.” 18 

An amazing thing happens when we offer praise and 
thanksgiving to God. When we give God enjoyment, our own 
hearts are filled with joy! 

My mother loved to cook for me. Even after I married Kay, 
when we would visit my parents, Mom prepared incredible home- 
cooked feasts. One of her great pleasures in life was watching us 
kids eat and enjoy what she prepared. The more we enjoyed 
eating it, the more enjoyment it gave her. 

But we also enjoyed pleasing Mom by expressing our 
enjoyment of her meal. It worked both ways. As I would eat the 
great meal, I would rave about it and praise my mother. I 
intended not only to enjoy the food but to please my mother. 
Everyone was happy. 

Worship works both ways, too. We enjoy what God has done 
for us, and when we express that enjoyment to God, it brings him 


PURPOSE #i: You Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


73 


joy—but it also increases our joy. The book of Psalms says, “The 
righteous are glad and rejoice in his presence; they are happy and 
shout for joy.” 19 

God smiles when we use our abilities. After the Flood, God 
gave Noah these simple instructions: u Be fruitful and increase in 
number and fill the earth.... Everything that lives and moves will 
be food for you. Just as I gave you the green plants, I now give you 
everything.” 29 

God said, “It’s time to get on with your life! Do the things I 
designed humans to do. Make love to your spouse. Have babies. 
Raise families. Plant crops and eat meals. Be humans! This is what 
I made you to be!” 

You may feel that the only time God is pleased with you is 
when you’re doing “spiritual” activities—like reading the Bible, 

attending church, praying, or 
sharing your faith. And you may 
think God is unconcerned about 
the other parts of your life. Actually, 
God enjoys watching every detail of 
your life, whether you are working, 
playing, resting, or eating. He 
doesn’t miss a single move you make. The Bible tells us, “The steps 
of the godly are directed by the Lord. He delights in every detail of 
their lives.” 21 

Every human activity, except sin, can be done for God’s 
pleasure if you do it with an attitude of praise. You can wash 
dishes, repair a machine, sell a product, write a computer 
program, grow a crop, and raise a family for the glory of God. 

Like a proud parent, God especially enjoys watching you use 
the talents and abilities he has given you. God intentionally 
gifted us differently for his enjoyment. He has made some to be 
athletic and some to be analytical. You may be gifted at 
mechanics or mathematics or music or a thousand other skills. 
All these abilities can bring a smile to God’s face. The Bible 

The Purpose-Driven Life 74 


--- 

God enjoys watching 
every detail of your life. 

— - 



says, “He has shaped each person in turn; now he watches 
everything we do.” 22 

You don’t bring glory or pleasure to God by hiding your 
abilities or by trying to be someone else. You only bring him 
enjoyment by being you. Anytime you reject any part of 
yourself, you are rejecting God’s wisdom and 
sovereignty in creating you. God says, “Ton have no 
right to argue with your Creator. Ton are merely a clay pot 
shaped by a potter. The clay doesn’t ask, c Why did you make 
me this way?”’ 23 

In the f il m Chariots of Fire, Olympic runner Eric 
Liddell says, “I believe God made me for a purpose, but 
he also made me fast, and when I run, I feel God’s pleasure.” 
Later he says, “To give up running would be to hold him in 
contempt.” There are no unspiritual abilities, just misused ones. 
Start using yours for God’s pleasure. 

God also gains pleasure in watching you enjoy his creation. He 
gave you eyes to enjoy beauty, ears to enjoy sounds, your nose 
and taste buds to enjoy smells and tastes, and the nerves under 
your skin to enjoy touch. Every act of enjoyment becomes an act 
of worship when you thank God for it. In fact, the Bible says, 
“God ... generously gives us everything for our enjoyment.” 2i 

God even enjoys watching you sleep! When my children were 
small, I remember the deep satisfaction of watching them sleep. 
Sometimes the day had been filled with problems and 
disobedience, but asleep they looked contented, secure, and 
peaceful, and I was reminded of how much I love them. 

My children didn’t have to do anything for me to enjoy them. I 
was happy to just watch them breathing, because I loved them so 
much. As their little chests would rise and fall. I’d smile, and 
sometimes tears of joy filled my eyes. When you are sleeping, God 
gazes at you with love, because you were his idea. He loves you as 
if you were the only person on earth. 


DAY NINE: 

WHAT 

MAKES 

GOD 

SMILE? 


PURPOSE # 1 : You Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


75 


Parents do not require their children to be perfect, or even 
mature, in order to enjoy them. They enjoy them at every stage of 
development. In the same way, God doesn’t wait for you to reach 
maturity before he starts liking you. He loves and enjoys you at 
every stage of your spiritual development. 

You may have had unpleasable teachers or parents as you were 
growing up. Please don’t assume God feels that way about you. 

He knows you are incapable of being perfect or sinless. The Bible 
says, “He certainly knows what we are made of. He bears in mind 
that we are dust .” 25 

What God looks at is the attitude of your heart: Is pleasing him 
your deepest desire? This was Paul’s life goal: “More than anything 
else, however, we want to please him, whether in our home here or 
there.” 26 When you live in light of eternity, your focus changes 
from “How much pleasure am I getting out of life?” to “How 
much pleasure is God getting out of my life?” 

God is looking for people like Noah in the twenty-first century— 
people willing to live for the pleasure of God. The Bible says, 

“The Lord looks down from heaven on all mankind to see if there are 
any who are wise, who want to please God .” 27 

Will you make pleasing God the goal of your life? There is 
nothing that God won’t do for the person totally absorbed with 
this goal. 


Day Nine 

Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: God smiles when I trust him. 

Verse to Remember: “The Lord is pleased with those who 
worship him and trust his love.” Psalm 147:11 (CEV) 

Question to Consider: Since God knows what is best, 
in what areas of my life do I need to trust him most? 

L _ _ 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


76 








The Heart of Worship 

Give yourselves to God.... 

Surrender your whole being to him 
to be used for righteous purposes. 

Romans 6:13 (TEV) 


The heart of worship is surrender. 

Surrender is an unpopular word, disliked almost as much as the 
word submission. It implies losing, and no one wants to be a loser. 
Surrender evokes the unpleasant images of admitting defeat in 
battle, forfeiting a game, or yielding to a stronger opponent. The 
word is almost always used in a negative context. Captured 
criminals surrender to authorities. 

In today’s competitive culture we are taught to never give up 
and never give in—so we don’t hear much about surrendering. If 
winning is everything, surrendering is unthinkable. We would 
rather talk about winning, succeeding, overcoming, and 
conquering than yielding, submitting, obeying, and surrendering. 
But surrendering to God is the heart of worship. It is the natural 
response to God’s amazing love and mercy. We give ourselves to 
him, not out of fear or duty, but in love, “ because he first loved us.” 1 


PURPOSE #1; You Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


77 


After spending eleven chapters of the book of Romans 
explaining God’s incredible grace to us, Paul urges us to fully 
surrender our lives to God in worship: “So then, my friends, 
because of God’s great mercy to us... offer yourselves as a living 
sacrifice to God, dedicated to his service and pleasing to him. This 
is the true worship that you should offer .” 2 

True worship—bringing God pleasure—happens when you 
give yourself completely to God. Notice the first and last words of 
that verse are the same: offer. 

Offering yourself to God is what worship is all about. 

This act of personal surrender is called many tilings: consecration, 
making Jesus your Lord, taking up your cross, dying to self, 

yielding to the Spirit. What matters 
is that you do it, not what you call it. 
God wants your life—all of it. 
Ninety-five percent is not enough. 

There are three barriers that 
block our total surrender to God: 
fear, pride, and confusion. We don’t 
realize how much God loves us, we want to control our own lives, 
and we misunderstand the meaning of surrender. 

Can I trust God? Trust is an essential ingredient to surrender. 
You won’t surrender to God unless you trust him, but you can’t 
trust him until you know him better. Fear keeps us from 
surrendering, but love casts out all fear. The more you realize how 
much God loves you, the easier surrender becomes. 

How do you know God loves you? He gives you many 
evidences: God says he loves you; 3 you’re never out of his sight; 4 
he cares about every detail of your life; 5 he gave you the capacity 
to enjoy all kinds of pleasure; 6 he has good plans for your life; 7 he 
forgives you; 8 and he is lovingly patient with you. 9 God loves you 
infinitely more than you can imagine. 

The greatest expression of this is the sacrifice of God’s Son for 
you. “God proves his love for us in that while we still were sinners 


-- 

Offering yourself to God is 
what worship is all about. 

— - 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


7 8 



Christ died for us.” 10 If you want to know how much you matter to 
God, look at Christ with his arms outstretched on the cross, saying, 
“I love you this much! I’d rather die than live without you.” 

God is not a cruel slave driver or a bully who uses brute force 
to coerce us into submission. He doesn’t try to break our will, 
but woos us to himself so that we might offer ourselves freely to 
him. God is a lover and a liberator, and surrendering to him 
brings freedom, not bondage. When we completely surrender 
ourselves to Jesus, we discover that he is not a tyrant, but a savior; 
not a boss, but a brother; not a dictator, but a friend. 

Admitting our limitations. A second barrier to total 
surrender is our pride. We don’t want to admit that we’re just 
creatures and not in charge of everything. It is the oldest 
temptation: “You’ll be like God!” 11 That desire—to have complete 
control—is the cause of so much stress in our lives. Life is a 
struggle, but what most people don’t realize is that our struggle, 
like Jacob’s, is really a struggle with God! We want to be God, 
and there’s no way we are going to win that struggle. 

A. W. Tozer said, “The reason why many are still troubled, still 
seeking, still making little forward progress is because they 
haven’t yet come to the end of themselves. We’re still 
trying to give orders, and interfering with God’s 
work within us.” 

We aren’t God and never will be. We are humans. 

It is when we try to be God that we end up most like 
Satan, who desired the same thing. 

We accept our humanity intellectually, but not 
emotionally. When faced with our own limitations, 
we react with irritation, anger, and resentment. We want to be 
taller (or shorter), smarter, stronger, more talented, more 
beautiful, and wealthier. We want to have it all and do it all, and 
we become upset when it doesn’t happen. Then when we notice 
that God gave others characteristics we don’t have, we respond 
with envy, jealousy, and self-pity. 


DAY TEN: 

THE 

HEART 

OF 

WORSHIP 


PURPOSE #1: You Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


79 



What it means to surrender. Surrendering to God is not 
passive resignation, fatalism, or an excuse for laziness. It is not 
accepting the status quo. It may mean the exact opposite: 
sacrificing your life or suffering in order to change what needs to 
be changed. God often calls surrendered people to do battle on 
his behalf. Surrendering is not for cowards or doormats. 
Likewise, it does not mean giving up rational 
thinking. God would not waste the mind he gave 
you! God does not want robots to serve him. 

Surrendering is not repressing your personality. 
God wants to use your unique personality. Rather 
than its being diminished, surrendering 
enhances it. C. S. Lewis observed, “The more 
we let God take us over, the more truly ourselves we 
become—because he made us. He invented all the different 
people that you and I were intended to be. ... It is when I turn to 
Christ, when I give up myself to His personality, that I first begin 
to have a real personality of my own.” 

Surrendering is best demonstrated in obedience. You say “yes, 
Lord” to whatever he asks of you. To say “no, Lord” is to speak a 
contradiction. You can’t call Jesus your Lord when you refuse to 
obey him. After a night of failed fishing, Simon modeled surrender 
when Jesus told him to try again: “Master, we’ve worked hard all 
night and haven’t caught anything. But because you say so, I will let 
down the nets.” 12 Surrendered people obey God’s word, even if it 
doesn’t make sense. 

Another aspect of a fully surrendered life is trust. Abraham 
followed God’s leading without knowing where it would take him. 
Hannah waited for God’s perfect timing without knowing when. 
Mary expected a miracle without knowing how. Joseph trusted 
God’s purpose without knowing why circumstances happened the 
way they did. Each of these people were fully surrendered to God. 

You know you’re surrendered to God when you rely on God to 
work things out instead of trying to manipulate others, force your 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


80 


agenda, and control the situation. You let go and let God work. 
You don’t have to always be “in charge.” The Bible says, 
“Surrender yourself to the Lord, and wait patiently for him.” 15 
Instead of trying harder, you trust more. You also know you’re 
surrendered when you don’t react to criticism and rush to defend 
yourself. Surrendered hearts show up best in relationships. You 
don’t edge others out, you don’t demand your rights, and you 
aren’t self-serving when you’re surrendered. 

The most difficult area to surrender for many people is their 
money. Many have thought, “I want to live for God but I also 
want to earn enough money to live comfortably and retire 
someday.” Retirement is not the goal of a surrendered life, 
because it competes with God for the primary attention of our 
lives. Jesus said, “You cannot serve both God and money” 14 and 
“Whereveryour treasure is, your heart will be also.” 15 

The supreme example of self-surrender is Jesus. The night 
before his crucifixion Jesus surrendered himself to God’s plan. He 
prayed, “Father, everything is possible 
for you. Please take this cup of 
suffering away from me. Yet I want 
your will, not mine.” 16 

Jesus didn’t pray, “God, if you’re 
able to take away this pain, please 
do so.” He had already affirmed 
that God can do anything! Instead he prayed, “God, if it is in your 
best interest to remove this suffering, please do so. But if it fulfills 
your purpose, that’s what I want, too.” 

Genuine surrender says, “Father, if this problem, pain, sickness, 
or circumstance is needed to fulfill your purpose and glory in my 
life or in another’s, please doraYtake it away.” This level of 
maturity does not come easy. In Jesus’ case, he agonized so much 
over God’s plan that he sweat drops of blood. Surrender is hard 
work. In our case, it is intense warfare against our self-centered 
nature. 


Surrender is best demonstrated 
in obedience and trust. 

- V - 


PURPOSE #1: Tou Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


81 



The blessing of surrender. The Bible is crystal clear about 
how you benefit when you fully surrender your life to God. First, 
you experience peace: “Stop quarreling with God! If you agree with 
him, you will have peace at last, and things will go well for you.” 17 
Next, you experience freedom: “Offer yourselves to the ways of God 
and the freedom never quits.... [his] commands set you free to live 
openly in his freedom!” 1 * Third, you experience God’s power in 
your life. Stubborn temptations and overwhelming problems can 
be defeated by Christ when given to him. 

As Joshua approached the biggest battle of his life, 19 he 
encountered God, fell in worship before him, and surrendered his 
plans. That surrender led to a stunning victory at Jericho. This is 
the paradox: Victory comes through surrender. Surrender doesn’t 
weaken you; it strengthens you. Surrendered to God, you don’t 
have to fear or surrender to anything else. William Booth, 
founder of the Salvation Army, said, “The greatness of a man’s 
power is in the measure of his surrender.” 

Surrendered people are the ones God uses. God chose Mary to 
be the mother of Jesus, not because she was talented or wealthy 
or beautiful, but because she was totally surrendered to him. 
When the angel explained God’s improbable plan, she calmly 
responded, “I am the Lord’s servant, and I am willing to accept 
whatever he wants,” 20 Nothing is more powerful than a 
surrendered life in the hands of God. “Sogive yourselves completely 
to God” 21 

The best way to live. Everybody eventually surrenders to 
something or someone. If not to God, you will surrender to the 
opinions or expectations of others, to money, to resentment, to 
fear, or to your own pride, lusts, or ego. You were designed to 
worship God—and if you fail to worship him, you will create 
other things (idols) to give your life to. You are free to choose 
what you surrender to, but you are not free from the 
consequences of that choice. E. Stanley Jones said, “If you don’t 
surrender to Christ, you surrender to chaos.” 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


82 


Surrender is not the best way to live; it is the only way to live. 
Nothing else works. All other approaches lead to frustration, 
disappointment, and self-destruction. The King James Version calls 
surrender “your reasonable 
service.” 22 Another version translates 
it “the most sensible way to serve 
God.” 23 Surrendering your life is not 
a foolish emotional impulse but a 
rational, intelligent act, the most 
responsible and sensible thing you 
can do with your life. That is why 
Paul said, “So we make it our goal to please him. ” 24 Your wisest 
moments will be those when you say yes to God. 

Sometimes it takes years, but eventually you discover that the 
greatest hindrance to God’s blessing in your life is not others, it is 
yourself—your self-will, stubborn pride, and personal ambition. 
You cannot fulfill God’s purposes for your life while focusing on 
your own plans. 

If God is going to do his deepest work in you, it will begin with 
this. So give it all to God: your past regrets, your present problems, 
your future ambitions, your fears, dreams, weaknesses, habits, hurts, 
and hang-ups. Put Jesus Christ in the driver’s seat of your life and 
take your hands off the steering wheel. Don’t be afraid; nothing 
under his control can ever be out of control. Mastered by Christ, 
you can handle anything. You will be like Paul: “I am ready for 
anything and equal to anything through Him who infuses inner 
strength into me, that is, I am self-sufficient in Christ’s sufficiency.” 25 

Paul’s moment of surrender occurred on the Damascus road 
after he was knocked down by a blinding light. For others, God 
gets our attention with less drastic methods. Regardless, 
surrendering is never just a one-time event. Paul said, “I die 
daily.'” 26 There is a moment of surrender, and there is the practice 
of surrender, which is moment-by-moment and lifelong. The 
problem with a living sacrifice is that it can crawl off the altar, so 


Surrender is not the best way 
to live; it is the only way to live. 
Nothing else works. 

— - 


PURPOSE # 1 : Vou Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


8 ? 



you may have to resurrender your life fifty times a day. You must 
make it a daily habit. Jesus said, “If people want to follow me, they 
must give up the things they want. They must be willing to give up 
their lives daily to follow me.” 27 

Let me warn you: When you decide to live a totally 
surrendered life, that decision will be tested. Sometimes it will 
mean doing inconvenient, unpopular, costly, or seemingly 
impossible tasks. It will often mean doing the opposite of what 
you feel like doing. 

One of the great Christian leaders of the twentiedi century was Bill 
Bright, the founder of Campus Crusade for Christ. Through Crusade 
staff around the world, the Four Spiritual Laws tract, and the Jesus 
film (seen by over four billion people), more than 150 mil li on people 
have come to Christ and will spend eternity in heaven. 

I once asked Bill, “Why did God use and bless your life so 
much?” He said, “When I was a young man, I made a contract with 
God. I literally wrote it out and signed my name at the bottom. It 
said, ‘Front tins day forward, I am a slave of Jesus Christ.’” 

Have you ever signed a contract like that with God? Or are you 
still arguing and struggling with God over his right to do with 
your life as he pleases? Now is your time to surrender—to God’s 
grace, love, and wisdom. 


Day Ten 

Thinking about My Purpose 

| 

Point to Ponder: The heart of worship is surrender. 

I 

Verse to Remember: “Surrender your whole being to 
him to be used for righteous purposes.” 

Romans 6:13b (TEV) 

I 

Question to Consider: What area of my life am I 
holding back from God? 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


84 







Becoming Best Friends 
with God 


Since we were restored to friendship with 
God by the death of his Son while we were 
still his enemies, we will certainly be delivered 
from eternal punishment by his life. 
Romans 5:10 (NLT) 


God wants to be your best friend. 

Your relationship to God has many different aspects: God is 
your Creator and Maker, Lord and Master, Judge, Redeemer, 
Father, Savior, and much more. 1 But the most shocking truth is 
this: Almighty God yearns to be your Friend! 

In Eden we see God’s ideal relationship with us: Adam and Eve 
enjoyed an intimate friendship with God. There were no rituals, 
ceremonies, or religion—just a simple loving relationship between 
God and the people he created. Unhindered by guilt or fear, 
Adam and Eve delighted in God, and he delighted in them. 

We were made to live in God’s continual presence, but after 
the Fall, that ideal relationship was lost. Only a few people in 
Old Testament times had the privilege of friendship with God. 
Moses and Abraham were called “friends of God,” David was 


PURPOSE #l Ton Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


85 


DAY ELEVEN: 

BECOMING 
BEST 
FRIENDS 
WITH GOD 


called “a man after [God’s] own heart,” and Job, Enoch, and 
Noah had intimate friendships with God. 2 But fear of God, not 
friendship, was more common in the Old Testament. 

Then Jesus changed the situation. When he paid for our sins on 
the cross, the veil in the temple that symbolized our separation 
from God was split from top to bottom, indicating that direct 
access to God was once again available. 

Unlike the Old Testament priests who had to spend hours 
preparing to meet him, we can now approach God anytime. The 
Bible says, “Now we can rejoice in our wonderful new relationship 
with God—all because of what our Lord Jesus Christ 
has done for us in making us friends of God.” 3 

Friendship with God is possible only because of 
the grace of God and the sacrifice of Jesus. a All this 
is done by God, who through Christ changed us from 
enemies into Ins friends. ” 4 The old hymn says, 

“What a friend we have in Jesus,” but actually, God 
invites us to enjoy friendship and fellowship with all three persons 
of the Trinity: our Father, 5 the Son, 6 and the Holy Spirit. 7 

Jesus said, “I no longer call you servants, because a servant does 
not know his master’s business. Instead, I have called you friends, for 
everything that I learned from my Lather I have made known to 
you.” 3 The word for friend in this verse does not mean a casual 
acquaintance but a close, trusted relationship. The same word is 
used to refer to the best man at a wedding 9 and a king’s inner 
circle of intimate, trusted friends. In royal courts, servants must 
keep their distance from the Icing, but the inner circle of trusted 
friends enjoy close contact, direct access, and confidential 
information. 

That God would want me for a close friend is hard to 
understand, but the Bible says, “He is a God who is passionate 
about his relationship with you .” 10 

God deeply desires that we know him intimately. In fact, he 
planned the universe and orchestrated history, including the details 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


86 


of our lives, so that we could become his friends. The Bible says, 
“He made the entire human race and made the earth hospitable, 
with plenty of time and space for living so we could seek after God, 
and not just grope around in the dark but actually find him.” 11 

Knowing and loving God is our greatest privilege, and being 
known and loved is God’s greatest pleasure. God says, “If any 
want to boast, they should boast that they know and understand 
me.... These are the things that please me.” 12 

It’s difficult to imagine how an intimate friendship is possible 
between an omnipotent, invisible, perfect God and a finite, sinful 
human being. It’s easier to understand a Master-servant 
relationship or a Creator-creation relationship or even Father- 
child. But what does it mean when God wants me as a friend? By 
looking at the lives of God’s friends in the Bible, we learn six 
secrets of friendship with God. We will look at two secrets in this 
chapter and four more in the next. 


Becoming a Best Friend of God 

Through constant conversation. You will never grow a close 
relationship with God by just attending church once a week or 
even having a daily quiet time. Friendship with God is built by 


sharing all your life experiences 
with him. 

Of course, it is important to 
establish the habit of a daily 
devotional time with God, 13 but he 
wants more than an appointment in 
your schedule. He wants to be 
included in every activity, every 
conversation, every problem, and 


- - 

Knowing and loving God 
is our greatest privilege, 
and being known and loved 
is God’s greatest pleasure. 


- 


even every thought. You can carry on a continuous, open-ended 
conversation with him throughout your day, talking with him 
about whatever you are doing or thinking at that moment. 
“Praying without ceasing” 14 means conversing with God while 


PURPOSE # 1 : You Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


8 7 



shopping, driving, working, or performing any other everyday 
tasks. 

A common misconception is that “spending time with God” 
means being alone with him. Of course, as Jesus modeled, you 
need time alone with God, but that is only a fraction of your 
waking hours. Everything you do can be “spending time with 
God” if he is invited to be a part of it and you stay aware of his 
presence. 

The classic book on learning how to develop a constant 
conversation with God is Practicing the Presence of God. It was 
written in the seventeenth century by Brother Lawrence, a 
humble cook in a French monastery. Brother Lawrence was able 
to turn even the most commonplace and menial tasks, like 
preparing meals and washing dishes, into acts of praise and 
communion with God. The key to friendship with God, he said, is 
not changing what you do, but changing your attitude toward 
what you do. What you normally do for yourself you begin doing 
for God, whether it is eating, bathing, working, relaxing, or 
taking out the trash. 

Today we often feel we must “get away” from our daily routine 
in order to worship God, but that is only because we haven’t 
learned to practice his presence all the time. Brother Lawrence 
found it easy to worship God through the common tasks of life; 
he didn’t have to go away for special spiritual retreats. 

This is God’s ideal. In Eden, worship was not an event to 
attend, but a perpetual attitude; Adam and Eve were in constant 
communion with God. Because God is with you all the time, no 
place is any closer to God than the place where you are right now. 
The Bible says, “He rules everything and is everywhere and is in 
everything A 15 

Another of Brother Lawrence’s helpful ideas was to pray 
shorter conversational prayers continually through the day rather 
than trying to pray long sessions of complex prayers. To maintain 
focus and counteract wandering thoughts, he said, “I do not 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


88 


advise you to use a great multiplicity of words in prayer, since 
long discourses are often the occasions for wandering.” 16 In an 
age of attention deficit, this 450-year-old suggestion to keep it 
simple seems to be particularly 
relevant. 

The Bible tells us to “pray all the 
time.” 17 How is it possible to do 
this? One way is to use “breath 
prayers” throughout the day, as 
many Christians have done for 
centuries. You choose a brief 
sentence or a simple phrase that can 
be repeated to Jesus in one breath: “You are with me.” “I receive 
your grace.” “I’m depending on you.” “I want to know you.” “I 
belong to you.” “Help me trust you.” You can also use a short 
phrase of Scripture: “For me to live is Christ.” “You will never 
leave me.” “You are my God.” Pray it as often as possible so it is 
rooted deep in your heart. Just be sure that your motive is to 
honor God, not control him. 

Practicing the presence of God is a skill, a habit you can 
develop. Just as musicians practice scales every day in order to 
play beautiful music with ease, you must force yourself to think 
about God at different times in your day. You must train your 
mind to remember God. 

At first you will need to create reminders to regularly bring 
your thoughts back to the awareness that God is with you in that 
moment. Begin by placing visual reminders around you. You 
might post little notes that say, “God is with me and for me right 
now!” Benedictine monies use the hourly chimes of a clock to 
remind them to pause and pray “the hour prayer.” If you have a 
watch or cell phone with an alarm, you could do the same. 
Sometimes you will sense God’s presence; other times you won’t. 

If you are seeking an experience of his presence through all of 
this, you have missed the point. We don’t praise God to feel 


Everything you do can he 
“spending time with God” if he 
is invited to he a part of it and 
you stay aware of his presence. 

— - 


PURPOSE #i Ton Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


89 



good, but to do good. Your goal is not a feeling, but a continual 
awareness of the reality that God is always present. That is the 
lifestyle of worship. 

Through continual meditation. A second way to establish a 
friendship with God is by thinking about his Word throughout 
your day. This is called meditation, and the Bible 
repeatedly urges us to meditate on who God is, 
what he has done, and what he has said. 18 

It is impossible to be God’s friend apart from 
knowing what he says. You can’t love God unless 
you know him, and you can’t know hi m without 
knowing his Word. The Bible says God “revealed 
himself to Samuel through his word.” 19 God still uses that 
method today. 

While you cannot spend all day studying the Bible, you can 
think about it throughout the day, recalling verses you have read 
or memorized and mulling them over in your mind. 

Meditation is often misunderstood as some difficult, mysterious 
ritual practiced by isolated monks and mystics. But meditation is 
simply focused thinking—a skill anyone can learn and use 
anywhere. 

When you think about a problem over and over in your mind, 
that’s called worry. When you think about God’s Word over and 
over in your mind, that’s meditation. If you know how to worry, 
you already know how to meditate! You just need to switch your 
attention from your problems to Bible verses. The more you 
meditate on God’s Word, the less you will have to worry about. 

The reason God considered Job and David his close friends was 
that they valued his Word above everything else, and they 
thought about it continually throughout the day. Job admitted, 

“I have treasured the words of his mouth more than my daily 
bread.” 20 David said, “Oh, how I love your law! I meditate on it all 
day long.” 21 “They are constantly in my thoughts. I cannot stop 
thinking about them.” 22 



The Purpose-Driven Life 


90 


Friends share secrets, and God will share his secrets with you if 
you develop the habit of thinking about his Word throughout the 
day. God told Abraham his secrets, and he did the same with 
Daniel, Paul, the disciples, and other friends. 23 

When you read your Bible or hear a sermon or listen to a tape, 
don’t just forget it and walk away. Develop the practice of 
reviewing the truth in your mind, thinking about it over and over. 
The more time you spend reviewing what God has said, the more 
you will understand the “secrets” of this life that most people 
miss. The Bible says, “ Friendship with God is reserved for those who 
reverence him. With them alone he shares the secrets of his 
promises. ” 2A 

In the next chapter we will see four more secrets of cultivating 
a friendship with God, but don’t wait until tomorrow. Start 
today by practicing constant conversation with God and 
continual meditation on his Word. Prayer lets you speak to God; 
meditation lets God speak to you. Both are essential to becoming 
a friend of God. 

^-----” ----- 1 

Day Eleven 

Thinking about My Purpose 

I 

Point to Ponder: God wants to be my best friend. 

Verse to Remember: “Friendship with God is reserved 
for those who reverence him.” Psalm 25:14a (LB) 

Question to Consider: What can I do to remind 
myself to think about God and talk to him more often 
throughout the day? 


PURPOSE #1: You Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


91 









Developing Your Friendship 
with God 


He offers his friendship to the godly. 

Proverbs 332 (NLT) 

Draw close to God, and God 
will draw close to you. 

James 4:8 (NLT) 


You are as close to God as you choose to be. 

Like any friendship, you must work at developing your 
friendship with God. It won’t happen by accident. It takes desire, 
time, and energy. If you want a deeper, more intimate connection 
with God you must learn to honestly share your feelings with 
him, trust him when he asks you to do something, learn to care 
about what he cares about, and desire his friendship more than 
anything else. 

I must choose to be honest with God. The first building 
block of a deeper friendship with God is complete honesty— 
about your faults and your feelings. God doesn’t expect you to 
be perfect, but he does insist on complete honesty. None of 
God’s friends in the Bible were perfect. If perfection was a 
requirement for friendship with God, we would never be able to 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


92 


be his friends. Fortunately, because of God’s grace, Jesus is still 
the “friend of sinners.” 1 

In the Bible, the friends of God were honest about their 
feelings, often complaining, second-guessing, accusing, and 
arguing with their Creator. God, however, didn’t seem to be 
bothered by this frankness; in fact, he encouraged it. 

God allowed Abraham to question and challenge him over the 
destruction of the city of Sodom. Abraham pestered God over 
what it would take to spare the city, negotiating God down from 
fifty righteous people to only ten. 

God also listened patiently to David’s many accusations of 
unfairness, betrayal, and abandonment. God did not slay Jeremiah 
when he claimed that God had tricked him. Job was allowed to 
vent his bitterness during his ordeal, and in the end, God 
defended Job for being honest, and he rebuked Job’s friends for 
being inauthentic. God told them, “Ton haven’t been honest either 
with me or about me—not the way my friend Job has.... My friend 
Job will now pray for you and l will accept his prayer.” 2 

In one startling example of frank friendship, 3 God honestiy 
expressed his total disgust with Israel’s disobedience. He told 
Moses he would keep his promise to give the Israelites the 
Promised Land, but he wasn’t going one step farther with them in 
the desert! God was fed up, and he 
let Moses know exaedy how he felt. 

Moses, speaking as a “friend” of 
God, responded with equal candor: 

“‘Look, you tell me to lead this people 
but you don’t let me know whom 
you’re going to send with me.... If 
I’m so special to you, let me in on 
your plans.... Don’t forget, this is TOUR people, your 
responsibility.... If your presence doesn’t take the lead here, call this 
trip off right now! How else will I know that you’re with me in this, 
with me and your people? Are you traveling with us or not?...’ God 


- 


God doesn’t expect you to be 
perfect, but he does insist on 
complete honesty. 


■ 


PURPOSE #l Pou Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


93 



said to Moses, ‘All right. Just as you say; this also 1 will do, for I know 
you well and you are special to me.”’ 4 

Can God handle that kind of frank, intense honesty from you? 
Absolutely! Genuine friendship is built on disclosure. What may 
appear as audacity God views as authenticity. God listens to the 
passionate words of his friends; he is bored with predictable, pious 
cliches. To be God’s friend, you must be honest to God, sharing 

your true feeling, not what you 
think you ought to feel or say. 

It is likely that you need to 
confess some hidden anger and 
resentment at God for certain areas 
of your life where you have felt 
cheated or disappointed. Until we 


- -left's. —_—. 

Bitterness is the greatest harrier 
to friendship with God. 

— - 


mature enough to understand that God uses everything for good 
in our lives, we harbor resentment toward God over our 
appearance, background, unanswered prayers, past hurts, and 
other things we would change if we were God. People often 
blame God for hurts caused by others. This creates what William 
Backus calls “your hidden rift with God.” 

Bitterness is the greatest barrier to friendship with God: Why 
would I want to be God’s friend if he allowed this? The antidote, 
of course, is to realize that God always acts in your best interest, 
even when it is painful and you don’t understand it. But releasing 
your resentment and revealing your feeling is the first step to 
healing. As so many people in the Bible did, tell God exactly how 
you feel. 5 

To instruct us in candid honesty, God gave us the book of 
Psalms—a worship manual, full of ranting, raving, doubts, fears, 
resentments, and deep passions combined with thanksgiving, 
praise, and statements of faith. Every possible emotion is 
catalogued in the Psalms. When you read the emotional 
confessions of David and others, realize this is how God wants you 
to worship him—holding back nothing of what you feel. You can 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


94 



pray like David: “Ipour out my complaints before him and tell him 
all my troubles. For lam overwhelmed.” 6 

It’s encouraging to know that all of God’s closest friends— 
Moses, David, Abraham, Job, and others—had bouts with doubt. 
But instead of masking their misgivings with pious cliches, they 
candidly voiced them openly and publicly. Expressing doubt is 
sometimes the first step toward the next level of intimacy with 
God. 

I must choose to obey God in faith. Every time you trust 
God’s wisdom and do whatever he says, even when you don’t 
understand it, you deepen your friendship with God. We don’t 
normally think of obedience as a characteristic of friendship; that’s 
reserved for relationships with a parent or the boss or a superior 
officer, not a friend. However, Jesus made it clear that obedience 
is a condition of intimacy with God. He said, “You are my friends 
if you do what I command.” 7 

In the last chapter I pointed out that the word Jesus used when 
he called us “friends” could refer to the “friends of the Icing” in a 
royal court. While these close companions had special privileges, 
they were still subject to the Icing and had to obey his commands. 
We are friends with God, but we are not his equals. He is our 
loving leader, and we follow him. 

We obey God, not out of duty or fear or compulsion, but 
because we love him and trust that he knows what is best for us. 
We want to follow Christ out of gratitude for all 
he has done for us, and the closer we follow 
him, the deeper our friendship becomes. 

Unbelievers often think Christians obey out of 
obligation or guilt or fear of punishment, but 
the opposite is true. Because we have been 
forgiven and set free, we obey out of love—and 
our obedience brings great joy! Jesus said, “I have loved you even 
as the Father has loved me. Remain in my love. When you obey me, 
you remain in my love, just as I obey my Father and remain in his 


DAY TWELVE: 

DEVELOPING 

YOUR 

FRIENDSHIP 
WITH GOD 


PURPOSE # 1 : You Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


95 


love. I have told you this so that you will be filled with my joy. Tes, 
your joy will overflow !” 8 

Notice that Jesus expects us to do only what he did with the 
Father. His relationship with his Father is the model for our 
friendship with him. Jesus did whatever the Father asked him to 
do—out of love. 

True friendship isn’t passive; it acts. When Jesus asks us to love 
others, help the needy, share our resources, keep our lives clean, 
offer forgiveness, and bring others to him, love motivates us to 
obey immediately. 

We are often challenged to do “gnat things” 'tot God. Actually, 
God is more pleased when we do small things for him out of 
loving obedience. They may be unnoticed by others, but God 
notices them and considers them acts of worship. 

Great opportunities may come once in a lifetime, but small 
opportunities surround us every day. Even through such simple 
acts as telling the truth, being kind, and encouraging others, we 
bring a smile to God’s face. God treasures simple acts of 
obedience more than our prayers, praise, or offerings. The Bible 
tells us, “What pleases the Lord more: burnt offerings and sacrifices 
or obedience to his voice? It is better to obey than to sacrifice.” 9 

Jesus began his public ministry at age thirty by being baptized 
by John. At that event God spoke from heaven: “This is my beloved 
Son, and I am fully pleased with him.” 19 What had Jesus been 
doing for thirty years that gave God so much pleasure? The Bible 
says nothing about those hidden years except for a single phrase 
in Luke 2:51: “He went back to Nazareth with them, and lived 
obediently with them” (Msg). Thirty years of pleasing God were 
summed up in two words: “lived obediently”! 

I must choose to value what God values. This is what friends 
do—they care about what is important to the other person. The 
more you become God’s friend, the more you will care about the 
things he cares about, grieve over the things he grieves over, and 
rejoice over the things that bring pleasure to him. 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


9 6 


Paul is the best example of this. God’s agenda was his agenda, 
and God’s passion was his: “The thing that has me so upset is that I 
care about you so much—this is the passion of God burning inside 
me!” 11 David felt the same way: “Passion for your house burns 
within me, so those who insult you are also insidting me.” 12 

What does God care about most? The redemption of his 
people. He wants all his lost children found! That’s the whole 
reason Jesus came to earth. The dearest thing to the heart of God 
is the death of his Son. The second dearest thing is when his 
children share that news with others. To be a friend of God, you 
must care about all the people 
around you whom God cares 
about. Friends of God tell their 
friends about God. 

I must desire friendship with 
God more than anything else. 

The Psalms are filled with examples 
of this desire. David passionately 
desired to know God above all else; he used words like longing, 
yearning, thirsting, hungering. He craved God. He said, “The 
thing I seek most of all is the privilege of meditating in his Temple, 
living in his presence every day of my life, delighting in his 
incomparable perfections and glory.” 12 In another psalm he said, 
“Tour love means more than life to me.” li 

Jacob’s passion for God’s blessing on his life was so intense that 
he wrestled in the dirt all night with God, saying, “I will not let 
you go unless you bless me.” 15 The amazing part of that story is that 
God, who is all powerful, let Jacob win! God isn’t offended when 
we “wresde” with him, because wrestling requires personal 
contact and brings us close to him! It is also a passionate activity, 
and God loves it when we are passionate with him. 

Paul was another man passionate for friendship with God. 
Nothing mattered more; it was the first priority, total focus, and 
ultimate goal of his life. This is the reason God used Paul in such 


—----- 

The more you become God’s 
friend, the more you will care 
about the things he cares about. 


PURPOSE # 1 : You Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


97 



a great way. The Amplified translation expresses the frill force of 
Paul’s passion: “My determined purpose is that I may know Him — 
that I may progressively become more deeply and intimately 
acquainted with Him, perceiving and recognizing and 
understanding the wonders of His Person more strongly and more 
clearly .” 16 

The truth is—you are as close to God as you choose to be. 
Intimate friendship with God is a choice, not an accident. You 
must intentionally seek it. Do you really want it—more than 
anything? What is it worth to you? Is it worth giving up other 
things? Is it worth the effort of developing the habits and skills 
required? 

You may have been passionate about God in the past but 
you’ve lost that desire. That was the problem of the Christians in 
Ephesus—they had left their first love. They did all the right 
things, but out of duty, not love. If you’ve just been going 
through the motions spiritually, don’t be surprised when God 
allows pain in your life. 

Pain is the fuel of passion—it energizes us with an intensity to 
change that we don’t normally possess. C. S. Lewis said, “Pain is 
God’s megaphone.” It is God’s way of arousing us from spiritual 
lethargy. Your problems are not punishment; they are wake-up 
calls from a loving God. God is not mad at you; he’s mad 

about you, and he will do whatever it takes to bring 
you back into fellowship with him. But there is an 
easier way to reignite your passion for God: Start 
asking God to give it to you, and keep on asking 
until you have it. Pray this throughout your day: 
“Dear Jesus, more than anything else, I want to 
get to know you intimately.” God told the 
captives in Babylon, “When you get serious about finding 
me and want it more than anything else, I’ll make sure you won’t be 
disappointed.” 17 



The Purpose-Driven Life 


98 


Your Most Important Relationship 

There is nothing—absolutely nothing—more important than 
developing a friendship with God. It’s a relationship that will last 
forever. Paul told Timothy, “ Some of these people have missed the 
most important thing in life—they don’t know God.” l& Have you 
been missing out on the most important thing in life? You can do 
something about it starting now. Remember, it’s your choice. You 
are as close to God as you choose to be. 


'. -__ - 


Day Twelve 

Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: I’m as close to God as I choose to be. 


Verse to Remember: “Draw dose to God, and God will 
draw close to you.” James 4:8a (NLT) 

Question to Consider: What practical choices will I 
make today in order to grow closer to God? 


PURPOSE # 1 : You Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


99 






Worship That Pleases God 


Love the Lord your God with all your heart 
and with all your soul and with all 
your mind and with all your strength. 
Mark 12:30 (NIV) 


God wants all of you. 

God doesn’t want a part of your life. He asks for all your heart, 
all your soul, all your mind, and all your strength. God is not 
interested in halfhearted commitment, partial obedience, and the 
leftovers of your time and money. He desires your full devotion, 
not little bits of your life. 

A Samaritan woman once tried to debate Jesus on the best 
time, place, and style for worship. Jesus replied that these external 
issues are irrelevant. Where you worship is not as important as 
why you worship and how much of yourself you offer to God when 
you worship. There is a right and wrong way to worship. The 
Bible says, “Let us be grateful and worship God in a way that will 
please him.” 1 The kind of worship that pleases God has four 
characteristics: 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


100 


God is pleased when our worship is accurate. People often 
say, “I like to think of God as . . .and then they share their idea 
of the kind of God they would like to worship. But we cannot just 
create our own comfortable or politically correct image of God 
and worship it. That is idolatry. 

Worship must be based on the truth of Scripture, not our 
opinions about God. Jesus told the Samaritan woman, “True 
worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for they are 
the kind of worshipers the Father seeks .” 2 

To “worship in truth” means to worship God as he is truly 
revealed in the Bible. 

God is pleased when our worship is authentic. When Jesus 
said you must “worship in spirit, ” he wasn’t referring to the Holy 


Spirit, but to your spirit. Made in 
God’s image, you are a spirit that 
resides in a body, and God designed 
your spirit to communicate with 
him. Worship is your spirit 
responding to God’s Spirit. 

When Jesus said, “Love God with 
all your heart and soul” he meant 
that worship must be genuine and 


-—- 

Godf leasing worship is 
deeply emotional and deeply 
doctrinal. We use both our 
hearts and our heads. 




heartfelt. It is not just a matter of saying the right words; you 
must mean what you say. Heartless praise is not praise at all! It is 
worthless, an insult to God. 

When we worship, God looks past our words to see the attitude 
of our hearts. The Bible says, “Man looks at the ouWard 
appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart .” 2 

Since worship involves delighting in God, it engages your 
emotions. God gave you emotions so you could worship him with 
deep feeling—but those emotions must be genuine, not faked. 
God hates hypocrisy. He doesn’t want showmanship or pretense 
or phoniness in worship. He wants your honest, real love. We can 
worship God imperfectly, but we cannot worship him insincerely. 


PURPOSE #1: You Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


IOI 



Of course, sincerity alone is not enough; you can be sincerely 
wrong. That’s why both spirit and truth are required. Worship 
must be both accurate and authentic. God-pleasing worship is 
deeply emotional and deeply doctrinal. We use both our hearts 
and our heads. 

Today many equate being emotionally moved by music as 
being moved by the Spirit, but these are not the same. Real 
worship happens when your spirit responds to God, not to some 
musical tone. In fact, some sentimental, introspective songs 
hinder worship because they take the spotlight off God and 
focus on our feelings. Your biggest distraction in worship is 
yourself—your interests and your worries over what others 
think about you. 

Christians often differ on the most appropriate or authentic 
way to express praise to God, but these arguments usually just 
reflect personality and background differences. Many forms of 
praise are mentioned in the Bible, among them confessing, 
singing, shouting, standing in honor, kneeling, dancing, malting a 
joyful noise, testifying, playing musical instruments, and raising 
hands . 4 The best style of worship is the one that most 
authentically represents your love for God, based on the 
background and personality God gave you. 

My friend Gary Thomas noticed that many Christians seem 
stuck in a worship rut—an unsatisfying routine—instead of 

having a vibrant friendship with 
God, because they force themselves 
to use devotional methods or 
worship styles that don’t fit the way 
God uniquely shaped them. 

Gary wondered, If God 
intentionally made us all different, 
why should everyone be expected to 
love God in the same way? As he read Christian classics and 
interviewed mature believers, Gary discovered that Christians 


—-—- 

The best style of worship is the 
one that most authentically 
represents your love for God. 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


102 



have used many different paths for 2,000 years to enjoy intimacy 
with God: being outdoors, studying, singing, reading, dancing, 
creating art, serving others, having solitude, enjoying fellowship, 
and participating in dozens of other activities. 

In his book Sacred Pathways, Gary identifies nine of the ways 
people draw near to God: Naturalists are most inspired to love 
God out-of-doors, in natural settings. Sensates love 
God with their senses and appreciate beautiful 
worship services that involve their sight, taste, 
smell, and touch, not just their ears. 

Traditionalists draw closer to God through rituals, 
liturgies, symbols, and unchanging structures. 

Ascetics prefer to love God in solitude and 
simplicity. Activists love God through confronting evil, battling 
injustice, and working to make the world a better place. 
Caregivers love God by loving others and meeting their needs. 
Enthusiasts love God through celebration. Contemplatives 1 ove 
God through adoration. Intellectuals 1 ovc God by studying with 
their minds. 5 

There is no “one-size-fits-all” approach to worship and 
friendship with God. One thing is certain: You don’t bring glory 
to God by trying to be someone he never intended you to be. 
God wants you to be yourself. “That’s the kind of people the Father 
is out looking for: those who are simply and honestly themselves 
before him in their worship.” 6 

God is pleased when our worship is thoughtful. Jesus’ 
command to “love God with all your mind” is repeated four times 
in the New Testament. God is not pleased with thoughtless 
singing of hymns, perfunctory praying of cliches, or careless 
exclamations of “Praise the Lord,” because we can’t think of 
anything else to say at that moment. If worship is mindless, it is 
meaningless. You must engage your mind. 

Jesus called thoughtless worship “vain repetitions.” 7 Even 
biblical terms can become tired cliches from overuse, and we stop 



PURPOSE # 1 : Ton Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


103 



thinking about the meaning. It is so much easier to offer cliches 
in worship instead of making the effort to honor God with fresh 
words and ways. This is why I encourage you to read Scripture in 
different translations and paraphrases. It will expand 
your expressions of worship. 

Try praising God without using the words praise, 
hallelujah, thanks, or amen. Instead of saying, “We 
just want to praise you,” make a list of synonyms and 
use fresh words like admire, respect, value, revere, 
honor, and appreciate. 

Also, be specific. If someone approached you and repeated, “I 
praise you!” ten times, you would probably think, For what? You 
would rather receive two specific compliments than twenty vague 
generalities. So would God. 

Another idea is to make a list of the different names of God 
and focus on them. God’s names are not arbitrary; they tell us 
about different aspects of his character. In the Old Testament, 
God gradually revealed himself to Israel by introducing new 
names for himself, and he commands us to praise his name. 8 

God wants our corporate worship gatherings to be thoughtful, 
too. Paul devotes an entire chapter to this in 1 Corinthians 14 
and concludes, “Everything should be done in a fitting and 
orderly way.” 9 

Related to this, God insists that our worship services be 
understandable to unbelievers when they are present in our 
worship gatherings. Paul observed, “Suppose some strangers are in 
your worship service, when you are praising God with your spirit. If 
they don’t understand you, how will they know to say, ‘Amen’? You 
may be worshiping God in a wonderful way, but no one else will be 
helped.” 10 Being sensitive to unbelievers who visit your worship 
gatherings is a biblical command. To ignore this command is to 
be both disobedient and unloving. For a full explanation of this, 
see the chapter on “Worship Can Be a Witness” in The Purpose- 
Driven Church. 


DAY THIRTEEN: 

WORSHIP 

THAT 

PLEASES 

GOD 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


104 


God is pleased when our worship is practical. The Bible 

says, “Offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to 
God — this is your spiritual act of worship ” u Why does God want 
your body? Why doesn’t he say, “Offer your spirit”? Because 
without your body you can’t do anything on this planet. In 
eternity you will receive a new, improved, upgraded body, but 
while you’re here on earth, God says, “Give me what you’ve 
got!” He’s just being practical about worship. 

You have heard people say, “I can’t make it to the meeting 
tonight, but I’ll be with you in spirit.’’'’ Do you know what that 
means? Nothing. It’s worthless! As long as you’re on earth, your 
spirit can only be where your body is. If your body isn’t there, 
neither are you. 

In worship we are to “offer our bodies as living sacrifices.” 
Now, we usually associate the concept of “sacrifice” with 
something dead, but God wants you to be a living sacrifice. He 
wants you to live for him! However, the problem with a living 
sacrifice is that it can crawl off the 
altar, and we often do that. We 
sing, “Onward, Christian Soldiers” 
on Sunday, then go AWOL on 
Monday. 

In the Old Testament, God took 
pleasure in the many sacrifices of 


X.jfr' - — _ 

Real worship is rooted 
in the Word. 




worship because they foretold of Jesus’ sacrifice for us on the 
cross. Now God is pleased with different sacrifices of worship: 
thanksgiving, praise, humility, repentance, offerings of money, 
prayer, serving others, and sharing with those in need. 12 

Real worship costs. David knew this and said: “I will not offer to 
the Lord my God sacrifices that have cost me nothing A 13 

One thing worship costs us is our self-centeredness. You cannot 
exalt God and yourself at the same time. You don’t worship to be 
seen by others or to please yourself. You deliberately shift the 
focus off yourself. 


PURPOSE #1: Ton Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


105 



When Jesus said, “Love God with all your strength,” he pointed 
out that worship takes effort and energy. It is not always 
convenient or comfortable, and sometimes worship is a sheer act 
of the will—a willing sacrifice. Passive worship is an oxymoron. 

When you praise God even when you don’t feel like it, when 
you get out of bed to worship when you’re tired, or when you 
help others when you are worn out, you are offering a sacrifice of 
worship to God. That pleases God. 

Matt Redman, a worship leader in England, tells how his pastor 
taught his church the real meaning of worship. To show that 
worship is more than music, he banned all singing in their services 
for a period of time while they learned to worship in other ways. 
By the end of that time, Matt had written the classic song “Heart 
of Worship”: 

I’ll bring You more than a song, 

because the song itself is not what You’ve required. 

You search much deeper within 
than the way things appear. 

You’re looking into my heart. 14 

The heart of the matter is a matter of the heart. 



P 

i 

I 


Day Thirteen 

Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: God wants all of me. 

I 

Verse to Remember: “Love the Lord your God with all 
your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind 
and with all your strength Mark 12:30 (NIV) 

Question to Consider: Which is more pleasing to God 
right now—my public worship or my private worship? 

What will I do about this? 

_ _ __ .__ , __ __ 

106 


The Purpose-Driven Life 










When God Seems Distant 


The Lord has hidden himself from his people, 
hut I trust him and place my hope in him. 
Isaiah 8:17 (TEV) 


God is real, no matter how you feel. 

It is easy to worship God when things are going great in your 
life—when he has provided food, friends, family, health, and 
happy situations. But circumstances are not always pleasant. How 
do you worship God then? What do you do when God seems a 
million miles away? 

The deepest level of worship is praising God in spite of pain, 
thanking God during a trial, trusting him when tempted, 
surrendering while suffering, and loving him when he seems distant. 

Friendships are often tested by separation and silence; you are 
divided by physical distance or you are unable to talk. In your 
friendship with God, you won’t always feel close to him. Philip 
Yancey has wisely noted, “Any relationship involves times of 
closeness and times of distance, and in a relationship with God, 


PURPOSE #1: Ton Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


107 


no matter how intimate, the pendulum will swing from one side 
to the other.” 1 That’s when worship gets difficult. 

To mature your friendship, God will test it with periods of 
seeming separation—times when it feels as if he has abandoned or 
forgotten you. God feels a million miles away. St. John of the 
Cross referred to these days of spiritual dryness, doubt, and 
estrangement from God as “the dark night of the soul.” Henri 
Nouwen called them “the ministry of absence.” A. W. Tozer 
called them “the ministry of the night.” Others refer to “the 
winter of the heart.” 

Besides Jesus, David probably had the closest friendship with 
God of anyone. God took pleasure in calling him “a man after my 
own heart.” 2 Yet David frequently complained of God’s apparent 
absence: “Lord, why are you standing aloof and far away? Why do 
you hide when I need you the most?” 3 “Why have you forsaken me? 
Why do you remain so distant? Why do you ignore my cries for 
help?” A “Why have you abandoned me?” 3 

Of course, God hadn’t really left David, and he doesn’t leave 
you. He has promised repeatedly, “I will never leave you nor 
forsake you.” 6 But God has wot promised “you will always feel my 
presence.” In fact, God admits that sometimes he hides his face 
front us. 7 There are times when he appears to be 
MIA , missing-in-action, in your life. 

Floyd McClung describes it: “You wake up one 
morning and all your spiritual feelings are gone. 

You pray, but nothing happens. You rebuke the 
devil, but it doesn’t change anything. You go 
through spiritual exercises .. . you have your friends 
pray for you . . . you confess every sin you can imagine, then go 
around asking forgiveness of everyone you know. You fast . . . still 
nothing. You begin to wonder how long this spiritual gloom 
might last. Days? Weeks? Months? Will it ever end? ... it feels as if 
your prayers simply bounce off the ceiling. In utter desperation, 
you cry out, ‘What’s the matter with me?”’ 8 


DAY FOURTEEN: 

WHEN 

GOD 

SEEMS 

DISTANT 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


108 


The truth is, there’s nothing wrong with you! This is a normal 
part of the testing and maturing of your friendship with God. 
Every Christian goes through it at least once, and usually several 
times. It is painful and disconcerting, but it is absolutely vital for 
the development of your faith. 

Knowing this gave Job hope when 
he could not feel God’s presence in 
his life. He said, “Igo east , but he is 
not there. I go west, but I cannot 
find him. I do not see him in the 
north, for he is hidden. I turn to the 
south, but I cannot find him. But he knows where I am going. And 
when he has tested me like gold in afire, he will pronounce me 
innocent.” 9 

When God seems distant, you may feel that he is angry with 
you or is disciplining you for some sin. In fact, sin does disconnect 
us from intimate fellowship with God. We grieve God’s Spirit and 
quench our fellowship with him by disobedience, conflict with 
others, busyness, friendship with the world, and other sins. 10 

But often this feeling of abandonment or estrangement from 
God has nothing to do with sin. It is a test of faith—one we all 
must face: Will you continue to love, trust, obey, and worship 
God, even when you have no sense of his presence or visible 
evidence of his work in your life? 

The most common mistake Christians make in worship today is 
seeking an experience rather than seeking God. They look for a 
feeling, and if it happens, they conclude that they have worshiped. 
Wrong! In fact, God often removes our feelings so we won’t 
depend on them. Seeking a feeling, even the feeling of closeness 
to Christ, is not worship. 

When you are a baby Christian, God gives you a lot of 
confirming emotions and often answers the most immature, self- 
centered prayers—so you’ll know he exists. But as you grow in 
faith, he will wean you of these dependencies. 


— - y.f&T' - - 

God admits that sometimes 
he hides his face from us. 

— - 


PURPOSE #t Ton Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


109 



_- 


God’s omnipresence and the 
manifestation of his presence are 
two different things. One is a fact; 
the other is often a feeling. God is 
always present, even when yon are 
unaware of him, and his presence is 
too profound to be measured by 
mere emotion. 


The most common mistake 
Christians make in worship 
today is seeking an experience 
rather than seeking God. 


■ 


Yes, he wants you to sense his 


presence, but he’s more concerned that you trust him than that 
you feel him. Faith, not feelings, pleases God. 

The situations that will stretch your faith most will be those 
times when life falls apart and God is nowhere to be found. This 
happened to Job. On a single day he lost everything —his family, 
his business, his health, and everything he owned. Most 
discouraging—for thirty-seven chapters, God said nothing! 

How do you praise God when you don’t understand what’s 
happening in your life and God is silent? How do you stay 
connected in a crisis without communication? How do you keep 
your eyes on Jesus when they’re ftill of tears? You do what Job 
did: “Then befell to the ground in worship and said: ‘Naked I came 
from my mother’s womb, and naked I will depart. The Lord gave 
and the Lord has taken away; may the name of the Lord be 
praised.’” 11 

Tell God exactly how you feel. Pour out your heart to God. 
Unload every emotion that you’re feeling. Job did this when he 
said, “I can’t be quiet! I am angry and bitter. I have to speak!” 12 
He cried out when God seemed distant: “Oh, for the days when 1 
was in my prime, when God’s intimate friendship blessed my 
house.” 12 God can handle your doubt, anger, fear, grief, 
confusion, and questions. 

Did you know that admitting your hopelessness to God can be 
a statement of faith? Trusting God but feeling despair at the same 
time, David wrote, “I believed, so I said, ‘I am completely 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


iio 



ruined!”’ u This sounds like a contradiction: I trust God, but I’m 
wiped out! David’s frankness actually reveals deep faith: First, he 
believed in God. Second, he believed God would listen to his 
prayer. Third, he believed God would let him say what he felt and 
still love him. 

Focus on who God is—his unchanging nature. Regardless 
of circumstances and how you feel, hang on to God’s unchanging 
character. Remind yourself what you know to be eternally true 
about God: He is good, he loves me, he is with me, he knows 
what I’m going through, he cares, and he has a good plan for my 
life. V. Raymond Edman said, “Never doubt in the dark what 
God told you in the light.” 

When Job’s life fell apart, and God was silent, Job still found 
things he could praise God for: 

• That he is good and loving. 15 

• That he is all-powerful. 16 

• That he notices every detail of my life. 17 

• That he is in control. 18 

• That he has a plan for my life. 19 

• That he will save me. 20 


Trust God to keep his promises. During times of spiritual 
dryness you must patiently rely on the promises of God, not your 
emotions, and realize that he is taking you to a deeper level of 
maturity. A friendship based on emotion is shallow 
indeed. 

So don’t be troubled by trouble. Circumstances 
cannot change the character of God. God’s grace 
is still in full force; he is still for you, even when 
you don’t feel it. In the absence of confirming 
circumstances, Job held on to God’s Word. He 
said, “I have not departed from the commands of his 
lips; I have treasured the words of his mouth more than my daily 
bread.” 21 



PURPOSE # 1 ; You Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


hi 



This trust in God’s Word caused Job to remain faithful even 
though nothing made sense. His faith was strong in the midst of 
pain: “God may kill me, but still I will trust him ” 22 

When you feel abandoned by God yet continue to trust him in 
spite of your feelings, you worship him in the deepest way. 

Remember what God has already done for you. If God 
never did anything else for you, he would still deserve your 
continual praise for the rest of your life because of what Jesus did 
for you on the cross. God’s Son died for you! This is the greatest 
reason for worship. 

Unfortunately, we forget the cruel details of the agonizing 
sacrifice God made on our behalf. Familiarity breeds complacency. 
Even before his crucifixion, the Son of God was stripped naked, 
beaten until almost unrecognizable, whipped, scorned and 
mocked, crowned with thorns, and spit on contemptuously. 

Abused and ridiculed by heartless 
men, he was treated worse than an 
animal. 

Then, nearly unconscious from 
blood loss, he was forced to drag a 
cumbersome cross up a hill, was 
nailed to it, and was left to die the 
slow, excruciating torture of death 
by crucifixion. While his lifeblood 


When you feel abandoned 
by God yet continue to trust 
him, you worship him 
in the deepest way. 




drained out, hecklers stood by and shouted insults, malting fun of 
his pain and challenging his claim to be God. 

Next, as Jesus took all of mankind’s sin and guilt on himself, 
God looked away from that ugly sight, and Jesus cried out in 
total desperation, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken 
me?” Jesus could have saved himself—but then he could not 
have saved you. 

Words cannot describe the darkness of that moment. Why did 
God allow and endure such ghastly, evil mistreatment? Why? So 
you could be spared from eternity in hell, and so you could share 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


in 



in his glory forever! The Bible says, “Christ was without sin, but 
for our sake God made him share our sin in order that in union with 
him we might share the righteousness of God.” 23 

Jesus gave up everything so you could have everything. He 
died so you could live forever. That alone is worthy of your 
continual thanks and praise. Never again should you wonder what 
you have to be thankful for. 

I -— ------ 1 

Day Fourteen 

Thinking about My Purpose 

I 

Point to Ponder: God is real, no matter how I feel. 

Verse to Remember: “For God has said, T will never 
leave you; I will never abandon you. 2 ” 

Hebrews 13:5 (TEV) 

■ • 
Question to Consider: How can I stay focused on 

God’s presence, especially when he feels distant? 

____ J 


PURPOSE #1: You Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 


n? 









PURPOSE #2 



YOU WERE FORMED 
FOR GOD’S FAMILY 


I am the vine, and you are the branches. 
John 15:5 (CEV) 


Christ makes us one body... 
connected to each other. 
Romans 12:5 (GWT) 





Formed for God’s Family 

God is the One who made all things, 
and all things are for his glory. He wanted to 
have many children share his glory. 

Hebrews 2:ioa (NCV) 

See how very much our heavenly Father 
loves us, for he allows us to be called 
his children, and we really are! 
i John 3:1 (NLT) 


You were formed for God’s family. 

God wants a family, and he created you to be a part of it. This 
is God’s second purpose for your life, which he planned before 
you were born. The entire Bible is the story of God building a 
family who will love him, honor him, and reign with him forever. 
It says, “His unchanging plan has always been to adopt us into his 
own family by bringing us to himself through Jesus Christ. And this 
gave him great pleasure.” 1 

Because God is love, he treasures relationships. His very nature 
is relational, and he identifies himself in family terms: Father, Son, 
and Spirit. The Trinity is God’s relationship to himself. It’s the 
perfect pattern for relational harmony, and we should study its 
implications. 


PURPOSE # 2 : You Were Formed for God’s Family 


11 7 


God has always existed in loving relationship to himself, so he 
has never been lonely. He didn’t need a family—he desired one, 
so he devised a plan to create ns, bring us into his family, and 
share with us all he has. This gives God great pleasure. The Bible 
says, “It was a happy day for him when he gave ns our new lives, 
through the truth of his Word, and we became, as it were, the first 
children in his new family.” 2 

When we place our faith in Christ, God becomes our Father, 
we become his children, other believers become our brothers and 
sisters, and the church becomes our spiritual family. The family of 
God includes all believers in the past, the present, and the future. 

Every human being was created by God, but not everyone is a 
child of God. The only way to get into God’s family is by being 
born again into it. You became part of the human family by your 
first birth, but you become a member of God’s family by your 
second birth. God “has given us the privilege of being born again, 
so that we are now members of God'’s own family.” 2 

The invitation to be part of God’s family is universal, 4 but there 
is one condition: faith in Jesus. The Bible says, “Ton are all 
children of God through faith in Christ Jesus.” 2 

Your spiritual family is even more important than your physical 
family because it will last forever. Our families on earth are 
wonderful gifts from God, but they are temporary 
and fragile, often broken by divorce, distance, 
growing old, and inevitably, death. On the other 
hand, our spiritual family—our relationship to other 
believers—will continue throughout eternity. It is a 
much stronger union, a more permanent bond, than 
blood relationships. Whenever Paul would stop to 
consider God’s eternal purpose for us together, he 
would break out into praise: “When I think of the wisdom and scope 
of his plan I fall down on my knees and pray to the Father of all the 
great family of God—some of them already in heaven and some 
down here on earth.” 6 



The Purpose-Driven Life 


118 


Benefits of Being in God’s Family 

The moment you were spiritually born into God’s family, you 
were given some astounding birthday gifts: the family name, the 
family likeness, family privileges, family intimate access, and the 
family inheritance ! 7 The Bible says, 

“Since you are his child, everything he 
has belongs to you. ” 8 

The New Testament gives great 
emphasis to our rich “inheritance.” 

It tells us, “My God will meet all 
your needs according to his glorious 
riches in Christ Jesus.” 9 As children 
of God we get to share in the family 
fortune. Here on earth we are given “the riches... of his grace ... 
kindness ... patience ... glory ... wisdom ... power ... and 
mercy.” 10 But in eternity we will inherit even more. 

Paul said, “I want you to realize what a rich and glorious 
inheritance he has given to his people.” 11 What exactly does that 
inheritance include? First, we will get to be with God forever . 12 
Second, we will be completely changed to be like Christ . 13 Third, 
we will be freed from all pain, death, and suffering . 14 Fourth, we 
will be rewarded and reassigned positions of service . 15 Fifth, we 
will get to share in Christ’s glory . 16 What an inheritance! You are 
far richer than you realize. 

The Bible says, “God has reserved a priceless inheritance for his 
children. It is kept in heaven for you, pure and undefiled, beyond the 
reach of change and decay.” 17 This means that your eternal 
inheritance is priceless, pure, permanent, and protected. No one 
can take it from you; it can’t be destroyed by war, a poor 
economy, or a natural disaster. This eternal inheritance, not 
retirement, is what you should be looking forward to and 
working for. Paul says, “Whatever you do, work at it with all your 
heart, as working for the Lord, not for men, since you know that you 


—--- 

Tour spiritual family is 
even more important than 
your physical family because 
it will last forever. 

— - 


PURPOSE # 2 : You Were Formed for God’s Family 


119 



will receive an inheritance from the Lord as a reward.” 19. 
Retirement is a short-sighted goal. You shottld be living in light 
of eternity. 

Baptism: Identifying with God’s Family 

Healthy families have family pride; members are not ashamed 
to be recognized as a part of the family. Sadly, I have met many 
believers who have never publicly identified themselves with their 
spiritual family as Jesus commanded—by being 
baptized. 

Baptism is not an optional ritual, to be delayed or 
postponed. It signifies your inclusion in God’s family. 
It publicly announces to the world, “I am not 
ashamed to be a part of God’s family.” Have you 
been baptized? Jesus commanded this beautiful act 
for all in his family. He told us to “go and make disciples of all the 
nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and 
the Holy Spirit.” 19 

For years I wondered why Jesus’ Great Commission gives the 
same prominence to baptism as it does to the great tasks of 
evangelism and edification. Why is baptism so important? Then I 
realized it is because it symbolizes God’s second purpose for your 
life: participating in the fellowship of God’s eternal family. 

Baptism is pregnant with meaning. Your baptism declares your 
faith, shares Christ’s burial and resurrection, symbolizes your 
death to your old life, and announces your new life in Christ. It is 
also a celebration of your inclusion in God’s family. 

Your baptism is a physical picture of a spiritual truth. It 
represents what happened the moment God brought you into his 
family: “Some of us are Jews, some are Gentiles, some are slaves, and 
some are free. But we have all been baptized into Christ’s body by one 
Spirit, and we have all received the same Spirit.” 20 

Baptism doesn’t make you a member of God’s family; only faith 
in Christ does that. Baptism shows you are part of God’s family. 


DAY FIFTEEN: 

FORMED 

FOR 

GOD’S 

FAMILY 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


120 


Like a wedding ring, it is a visible reminder of an inward 
commitment made in your heart. It is an act of initiation, not 
something you put off until you are spiritually mature. The only 
biblical condition is that you believe. 21 

In the New Testament, people were baptized as soon as they 
believed. At Pentecost, 3,000 were baptized the same day they 
accepted Christ. Elsewhere, an Ethiopian leader was baptized on 
the spot when he was converted, and Paul and Silas baptized a 
Philippian jailer and his family at midnight. There are no delayed 
baptisms in the New Testament. If you haven’t been baptized as 
an expression of your faith in Christ, do so as soon as possible, as 
Jesus commanded. 


Life’s Greatest Privilege 

The Bible says, “Jesus and the people he makes holy all belong to 
the same family. That is why he isn’t ashamed to call them his 


brothers and sisters.” 22 Let that 
amazing truth sink in. You are a 
part of God’s family, and because 
Jesus makes you holy, God is proud 
of you! The words of Jesus are 
unmistakable: “[Jesus] pointed to his 
disciples and said, c These are my 
mother and brothers. Anyone who 
does the will of my Father in heaven 


—-J 

Being included in Gods 
family is the highest honor 
and the greatest privilege you 
will ever receive. 




is my brother and sister and motherl’” 22 Being included in God’s 
family is the highest honor and the greatest privilege you will ever 
receive. Nothing else comes close. Whenever you feel 
unimportant, unloved, or insecure, remember to whom you 
belong. 


PURPOSE #2: You Were Formed for God’s Family 


121 





Day Fifteen 

Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: I was formed for God’s family. 

Verse to Remember: “His unchanging plan has always 
been to adopt us into his own family by bringing us to 
himself through Jesus Christ.” Ephesians 1:5a (NLT) 

Question to Consider: How can I start treating other 
believers like members of my own family? 


The Purpose-Driven Life 








What Matters Most 


No matter what I say, what I believe, and 
what I do, I’m bankrupt without love. 
i Corinthians 13:3b (Msg) 

Love means living the way God commanded us 
to live. As you have heard from the beginning 
his command is this: Live a life of love. 

2 John 1:6 (NCV) 


Life is all about love. 

Because God is love, the most important lesson he wants you 
to learn on earth is how to love. It is in loving that we are most 
like him, so love is the foundation of every command he has given 
us: “The whole Law can be summed up in this one command: ‘Love 
others as you love yourself.’” 1 

Learning to love unselfishly is not an easy task. It runs counter 
to our self-centered nature. That’s why we’re given a lifetime to 
learn it. Of course, God wants us to love everyone, but he is 
particularly concerned that we learn to love others in his family. 
As we’ve already seen, this is the second purpose for your life. 
Peter tells us, “Show special love for God’s people.” 2 Paul echoes this 


PURPOSE #2: You Were Formed for God’s Family 


123 


sentiment: “When we have the opportunity to help anyone, we should- 
do it. But we should give special attention to those who are in the 
family of believers.” 3 

Why does God insist that we give special love and attention to 
other believers? Why do they get priority in loving? Because God 
wants Inis family to be known for its love more than 
anything else. Jesus said our love for each other —not 
our doctrinal beliefs—is our greatest witness to the 
world. He said, “Tour strong love for each other will 
prove to the world that you are my disciples.” 4 

In heaven we will enjoy God’s family forever, but 
first we have some tough work to do here on earth to prepare 
ourselves for an eternity of loving. God trains us by giving us 
“family responsibilities,” and the foremost of these is to practice 
loving each other. 

God wants you to be in regular, close fellowship with other 
believers so you can develop the skill of loving. Love cannot be 
learned in isolation. You have to be around people—irritating, 
imperfect, frustrating people. Through fellowship we learn three 
important truths. 

The Best Use of Life Is Love 

Love should be your top priority, primary objective, and 
greatest ambition. Love is not a good part of your life; it’s the most 
important part. The Bible says, “Let love be your greatest aim.” 5 

It’s not enough to say, “ One of the things I want in life is to be 
loving,” as if it’s in your top ten list. Relationships must have 
priority in your life above everything else. Why? 

Life without love is really worthless. Paul makes this point: 
“No matter what I say, what I believe, and what I do, I’m bankrupt 
without love.” 6 

Often we act as if relationships are something to be squeezed 
into our schedule. We talk about finding time for our children or 
making time for people in our lives. That gives the impression 


DAY SIXTEEN: 

WHAT 

MATTERS 

MOST 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


124 


that relationships are just a part of our lives along with many 
other tasks. But God says relationships are what life is all about. 

Four of the Ten Commandments deal with our relationship to 
God while the other six deal with our relationships with people. 
But all ten are about relationships! Later, Jesus summarized what 
matters most to God in two statements: love God and love 
people. He said, “‘You must love the Lord your God with all your 
heart....’ This is the first and greatest commandment. A second is 
equally important: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ All the other 
commandments and all the demands of the prophets are based on 
these Wo commandments.” 7 After learning to love God (worship), 
learning to love others is the second purpose of your life. 

Relationships, not achievements or the acquisition of things, 
are what matters most in life. So why do we allow our 
relationships to get the short end of the stick? When our 
schedules become overloaded, we start skimming relationally, 
cutting back on giving the time, energy, and attention that loving 
relationships require. What’s most important to God is displaced 
by what’s urgent. 

Busyness is a great enemy of relationships. We become 
preoccupied with making a living, doing our work, paying 
bills, and accomplishing goals as if these tasks are the 
point of life. They are not. The point of life is 
learning to love—God and people. Life minus love 
equals zero. 

Love will last forever. Another reason God tells us 
to make love our top priority is that it is eternal: “These 
three things continue forever: faith, hope, and love. And 
the greatest of these is love.”* 

Love leaves a legacy. How you treated other people, not your 
wealth or accomplishments, is the most enduring impact you can 
leave on earth. As Mother Teresa said, “It’s not what you do, but 
how much love you put into it that matters.” Love is the secret of 
a lasting heritage. 



PURPOSE #2: You Were Formed for God’s Family 


125 


I have been at the bedside of many people in their final 
moments, when they stand on the edge of eternity, and I have 
never heard anyone say, “Bring me my diplomas! I want to look 
at them one more time. Show me my awards, my medals, that 
gold watch I was given.” When life on earth is ending, people 
don’t surround themselves with objects. What we want around us 
is people—people we love and have relationships with. 

In our final moments we all realize that relationships are what 
life is all about. Wisdom is learning that truth sooner rather than 

later. Don’t wait until you’re on 
your deathbed to figure out that 
nothing matters more. 

We will be evaluated on our 
love. The third reason to make 
learning to love the goal of your life 
is that it is what we will be 
evaluated on in eternity. One of the ways God measures spiritual 
maturity is by the quality of your relationships. In heaven God 
won’t say, “Tell me about your career, your bank account, and 
your hobbies.” Instead he will review how you treated other 
people, particularly those in need . 9 Jesus said the way to love him 
is to love his family and care for their practical needs: “Truly I tell 
you, just us you did it to one of the least of these who are members of 
my family, you did it to me .” 10 

When you transfer into eternity, you will leave everything else 
behind. All you’re talcing with you is your character. That’s why 
the Bible says, “The only thing that counts is faith expressing itself 
through love .” 11 

Knowing this, I suggest tiiat when you wake up every morning, 
you kneel by your bed, or sit on the edge of it, and pray this: “God, 
whether I get anything else done today, I want to make sure that I 
spend time loving you and loving other people—because diat’s 
what life is all about. I don’t want to waste this day.” Why should 
God give you another day if you’re going to waste it? 


- 

Relationships are what 
life is all about. 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


12 6 



The Best Expression of Love Is Time 


The importance of things can be measured by how much time 
we are willing to invest in them. The more time you give to 
something, the more you reveal its importance and value to you. 
If you want to know a person’s priorities, just look at how they 
use their time. 

Time is your most precious gift because you only have a set 
amount of it. You can make more money, but you can’t make 
more time. When you give someone your time, you are giving 
them a portion of your life that you’ll never get back. Your time is 
your life. That is why the greatest gift you can give someone is 
your time. 

It is not enough just to say relationships are important; we 
must prove it by investing time in them. Words alone are 
worthless. “My children, our love should not be just words and talk; 
it must be true love, which shows itself in action.” 12 Relationships 
take time and effort, and the best 
way to spell love is “T-I-M-E.” 

The essence of love is not what we 
think or do or provide for others, 
but how much we give of ourselves. 

Men, in particular, often don’t 
understand this. Many have said to 


--- 

The greatest gift you can give 
someone is your time. 

— - 


me, “I don’t understand my wife and kids. I provide everything 
they need. What more could they want?” They want you! Your 
eyes, your ears, your time, your attention, your presence, your 
focus—your time. Nothing can take the place of that. 

The most desired gift of love is not diamonds or roses or 
chocolate. It is focused attention. Love concentrates so intently on 
another that you forget yourself at that moment. Attention says, 
“I value you enough to give you my most precious asset—my 
time.” Whenever you give your time, you are making a sacrifice, 
and sacrifice is the essence of love. Jesus modeled this: “Be full of 


PURPOSE #2: You Were Formed for God’s Family 


127 



love for others, following the example of Christ who loved you and 
gave Himself to God as a sacrifice to take away your sins.” 13 

You can give without loving, but you cannot love without 
giving. “God so loved the world that he gave... .” 14 Love means 
giving up—yielding my preferences, comfort, goals, security, 
money, energy, or time for the benefit of someone else. 

The Best Time to Love Is Now 

Sometimes procrastination is a legitimate response 
to a trivial task. But because love is what matters 
most, it takes top priority. The Bible stresses this 
repeatedly. It says, “Whenever we have the 
opportunity, we should do good to everyone,” 15 “Use 
every chance you have for doing good ” lb “Whenever 
you possibly can, do good to those who need it. Never 
tell your neighbor to wait until tomorrow if you can help 
them now.” 17 

Why is now the best time to express love? Because you don’t 
know how long you will have the opportunity. Circumstances 
change. People die. Children grow up. You have no guarantee of 
tomorrow. If you want to express love, you had better do it now. 

Knowing that one day you will stand before God, here are 
some questions you need to consider: How will you explain those 
times when projects or things were more important to you than 
people? Who do you need to start spending more time with? 

What do you need to cut out of your schedule to make that 
possible? What sacrifices do you need to make? 

The best use of fife is love. The best expression of love is time. 
The best time to love is now. 



128 


The Purpose-Driven Life 




' 


Day Sixteen 

Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: Life is all about love. 

Verse to Remember: “The entire law is summed up in a 
single command: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’” 

Galatians 5:14 (NIV) 

■ 

Question to Consider: Honestly, are relationships my 
first priority? How can I ensure that they are? 

__ — > 


PURPOSE #2: You Were Formedfor God’s Family 


129 








A Place to Belong 

You are members of Gods very own family, 
citizens of God’s country, and you belong in 
Gods household with every other Christian. 
Ephesians 2:19b (LB) 

God’s family is the church of the living God, 
the pillar andfoundation of the truth. 

1 Timothy 3:15b (GWT) 


You are called to belong, not just believe. 

Even in the perfect, sinless environment of Eden, God said, “It 
is not good for man to be alone.” 1 We are created for community, 
fashioned for fellowship, and formed for a family, and none of us 
can fulfill God’s purposes by ourselves. 

The Bible knows nothing of solitary saints or spiritual hermits 
isolated from other believers and deprived of fellowship. The 
Bible says we are put together, joined together, built together, 
members together, heirs together, fitted together, and held together 
and will be caught up together. 2 You’re not on your own anymore. 

While your relationship to Christ is personal, God never 
intends it to be private. In God’s family you are connected to 
every other believer, and we will belong to each other for eternity. 

130 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


The Bible says, “In Christ we who are many form one body, and 
each member belongs to all the others,” 3 

Following Christ includes belonging, not just believing. We are 
members of his Body—the church. C. S. Lewis noted that the 
word membership is of Christian origin, but the world has emptied 
it of its original meaning. Stores offer discounts to “members,” 
and advertisers use member names to create mailing lists. In 
churches, membership is often reduced to simply adding your 
name to a roll, with no requirements or expectations. 

To Paul, being a “member” of the church meant being a vital 
organ of a living body, an indispensable, interconnected part of 
the Body of Christ. 4 We need to recover and practice the biblical 
meaning of membership. The church is a body, not a building; an 
organism, not an organization. 

For the organs of your body to fulfill their purpose, they must 
be connected to your body. The same is true for you as a part 
of Christ’s Body. You were created for a specific role, but you 
will mi ss this second purpose of your life if you’re not attached 
to a living, local church. You discover your role in life through 
your relationships with others. The Bible tells us, “Each part 
gets its meaning from the body as a whole, not the other way 
around. The body we’re talking about is Christ’s body of chosen 
people. Each of us finds our meaning and function as a part of his 
body. But as a chopped-off finger or 
cut-off toe we wouldn’t amount to 
much, would we?” 5 

If an organ is somehow severed 
from its body, it will shrivel and die. 

It cannot exist on its own, and 
neither can you. Disconnected and 
cut off from the lifeblood of a local 
body, your spiritual life will wither and eventually cease to exist. 6 
This is why the first symptom of spiritual decline is usually 
inconsistent attendance at worship services and other gatherings 

PURPOSE #2: You Were Formed for God’s Family 131 


We discover our role 
in life through our 
relationships with others. 

— - 



of believers. Whenever we become careless about fellowship, 
everything else begins to slide, too. 

Membership in the family of God is neither inconsequential nor 
something to be casually ignored. The church is God’s agenda for 
the world. Jesus said, “I will build my church, and all the powers of 
hell will not conquer it.” 7 The church is indestructible and will 
exist for eternity. It will outlive this universe, and so will your role 
in it. The person who says, “I don’t need the church,” is either 
arrogant or ignorant. The church is so significant that Jesus died 

on the cross for it. “Christ loved the 
church and gave his life for it.” & 

The Bible calls the church “the 
bride of Christ” and “the body of 
Christ.” 9 1 can’t imagine saying to 
Jesus, “I love you, but I dislike your 
wife.” Or “I accept you, but I reject 
your body.” But we do this 
whenever we dismiss or demean or complain about the church. 
Instead, God commands us to love the church as much as Jesus 
does. The Bible says, “Love your spiritual family.” 10 Sadly, many 
Christians use the church but don’t love it. 

Your Local Fellowship 

Except for a few important instances referring to all believers 
throughout history, almost every time the word church is used in 
the Bible it refers to a local, visible congregation. The New 
Testament assumes membership in a local congregation. The only 
Christians not members of a local fellowship were those under 
church discipline who had been removed from the fellowship 
because of gross public sin. 11 

The Bible says a Christian without a church home is like an 
organ without a body, a sheep without a flock, or a child without 
a family. It is an unnatural state. The Bible says, “Ton belong in 
God’s household with every other Christian.” 12 


- — 

7 'he church will outlive 
this universe, and so will 
your role in it. 

— - 


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132 



Today’s culture of independent individualism has created many 
spiritual orphans—“bunny believers” who hop around from one 
church to another without any identity, accountability, or 
commitment. Many believe one can be a “good Christian 77 
without joining (or even attending) a local church, but God 
would strongly disagree. The Bible offers many compelling 
reasons for being committed and active in a local fellowship. 

Why You Need a Church Family 

A church family identifies you as a genuine believer. I can’t 
claim to be following Christ if I’m not committed to any specific 
group of disciples. Jesus said, “Tour love for one another will prove 
to the world that you are my disciples . 7713 

When we come together in love as a church family from 
different backgrounds, race, and social status, it is a powerful 
witness to the world. 14 You are not the Body of Christ on your 
own. You need others to express that. Together, not separated, we 
are his Body. 15 

A church family moves you out of self-centered isolation. 

The local church is the classroom for learning how to get along in 
God’s family. It is a lab for practicing unselfish, sympathetic love. 
As a participating member you learn to care about others and 
share the experiences of others: “If one part of the body suffers, all 
the other parts suffer with it. Or if one part of our 
body is honored, all the other parts share its honor.” 16 
Only in regular contact with ordinary, imperfect 
believers can we learn real fellowship and 
experience the New Testament truth of being 
connected and dependent on each other. 17 

Biblical fellowship is being as committed to each other as we 
are to Jesus Christ. God expects us to give our lives for each 
other. Many Christians who know John 3:16 are unaware of 
1 John 3:16: “Jesus Christ laid down his life for us. And we ought to 
lay down our lives for our brothers . 7718 This is the kind of sacrificial 


DAY SEVENTEEN: 

A PLACE 
TO BELONG 


PURPOSE #2: You Were Formed for God’s Family 


133 


love God expects you to show other believers—a willingness to 
love them in the same way Jesus loves you. 

A church family helps you develop spiritual muscle. You will 
never grow to maturity just by attending worship services and 
being a passive spectator. Only participation in the full life of a 
local church builds spiritual muscle. The Bible says, “As each part 
does its own special work, it helps the other parts grow, so that the 
whole body is healthy and growing and full of love.” 19 

Over fifty times in the New Testament the phrase “one 
another” or “each other” is used. We are commanded to love 
each other, pray for each other, encourage each other, admonish 
each other, greet each other, serve each other, teach each other, 
accept each other, honor each other, bear each other’s burdens, 
forgive each other, submit to each other, be devoted to each 
other, and many other mutual tasks. This is biblical 
membership! These are your “family responsibilities” that God 
expects you to fulfill through a local fellowship. Who are you 
doing these with? 

It may seem easier to be holy when no one else is around to 
frustrate your preferences, but that is a false, untested holiness. 
Isolation breeds deceitfulness; it is easy to fool ourselves into 
thinking we are mature if there is no one to challenge us. Real 
maturity shows up in relationships. 

We need more than the Bible in order to grow; we need other 
believers. We grow faster and stronger by learning front each 
other and being accountable to each other. When others share 
what God is teaching them, I learn and grow, too. 

The Body of Christ needs you. God has a unique role for you 
to play in his family. This is called your “ministry,” and God has 
gifted you for this assignment: “A spiritual gift is given to each of 
us as a means of helping the entire church.” 20 

Your local fellowship is the place God designed for you to 
discover, develop, and use your gifts. You may also have a wider 
ministry, but that is in addition to your service in a local body. 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


134 


Jesus has not promised to build your ministry; he has promised to 
build his church. 

You will share in Christ’s mission in the world. When Jesus 
walked the earth, God worked through the physical body of 
Christ; today he uses his spiritual body. The church is God’s 
instrument on earth. We are not just to model God’s love by 
loving each other; we are to carry it together to the rest of the 
world. This is an incredible privilege we have been given together. 
As members of Christ’s body, we are his hands, his feet, his eyes, 
and his heart. He works through us in the world. We each have a 
contribution to make. Paul tells us, “He creates each of us by Christ 
Jesus to join him in the work he does, the good work he has gotten 
ready for us to do, work we had better be doing.” 21 

A church family will help keep you from backsliding. None 
of us are immune to temptation. Given the right situation, you 
and I are capable of any sin. 22 God knows this, so he has assigned 
us as individuals the responsibility of keeping each other on track. 
The Bible says, “Encourage one another daily ... so that none of you 
may be hardened by sin’s deceitfulness;” 23 “Mind your own 
business” is not a Christian phrase. 

We are called and commanded to 
be involved in each other’s lives. If 
you know someone who is wavering 
spiritually right now, it is your 
responsibility to go after them and 
bring them back into the 
fellowship. James tells us, “If you 


Juft'S, - 

Jesus has not promised to build 
your ministry; he has promised 
to build his church. 


— ■ 


know people who have wandered off from God’s truth, don’t write 
them off. Go after them. Get them back.” 24: 

A related benefit of a local church is that it also provides the 
spiritual protection of godly leaders. God gives shepherd leaders 
the responsibility to guard, protect, defend, and care for the 
spiritual welfare of his flock. 25 We are told, “Their work is to watch 
over your souls, and they know they are accountable to God.” 26 


PURPOSE #2: You Were Formed for God’s Family 


135 



Satan loves detached believers, unplugged from the life of the 
Body, isolated from God’s family, and unaccountable to spiritual 
leaders, because he knows they are defenseless and powerless 
against his tactics. 

It’s All in the Church 

In my book The Purpose-Driven Church, I explain how being 
part of a healthy church is essential to living a healthy life. I hope 
you will read that book, too, because it will help you understand 
how God designed his church specifically to help you 
fulfill the five purposes he has for your life. He 
created the church to meet your five deepest needs: a 
purpose to live for, people to live with, principles to 
live by, a profession to live out, and power to live 
on. There is no other place on earth where you can 
find all five of these benefits in one place. 

God’s purposes for his church are identical to his 
five purposes for you. Worship helps you focus on God ; 
fellowship helps you face life’s problems-, discipleship helps fortify 
your faitt, ministry helps find your talents; evangelism helps fulfill 
your mission. There is nothing else on earth like the church! 

Your Choice 

Whenever a child is born, he or she automatically becomes a 
part of the universal family of human beings. But that child also 
needs to become a member of a specific family to receive nurture 
and care and grow up healthy and strong. The same is true 
spiritually. When you were born again, you automatically became 
a part of God’s universal family, but you also need to become a 
member of a local expression of God’s family. 

The difference between being a church attender and a church 
member is commitment. Attenders are spectators from the sidelines; 
members get involved in the ministry. Attenders are consumers; 
members are contributors. Attenders want the benefits of a church 



The Purpose-Driven Life 


136 


without sharing the responsibility. They are like couples who want 
to live together without committing to a marriage. 

Why is it important to join a local church family? Because it 
proves you are committed to your spiritual brothers and sisters in 
reality, not just in theory. God wants you to love real people, not 
ideal people. You can spend a lifetime searching for the perfect 
church, but you will never find it. You are called to love imperfect 
sinners, just as God does. 

In Acts, the Christians in Jerusalem were very specific in their 
commitment to each other. They were devoted to fellowship. The 
Bible says, “ They committed themselves to the teaching of the apostles, 
the life together, the common meal, and the prayers .” 27 God expects 
you to commit to the same things today. 

The Christian life is more than just commitment to Christ; it 
includes a commitment to other Christians. The Christians in 
Macedonia understood this. Paul said, “First they gave themselves to 
the Lord; and then, by God’s will, they gave themselves to ns as well. ” 1& 
Joining the membership of a local church is the natural next step 
once you’ve become a child of God. You become a Christian by 
committing yourself to Christ, but you become a church member 
by committing yourself to a specific group of believers. The first 
decision brings salvation; the second brings fellowslfip. 


Day Seventeen 
Thinking about My Purpose 

■ 

Point to Ponder: I am called to belong, not just believe. 

I 

Verse to Remember: “In Christ we who are many form 
one body, and each member belongs to all the others.” 

Romans 12:5 (NIV) 

Question to Consider: Does my level of involvement 
in my local church demonstrate that I love and am 
committed to God’s family? 


PURPOSE #2: You Were Formedfor God’s Family 


i?7 










Experiencing Life Together 

Each one ofyou is part of the body ofChrist, 
and you were chosen to live together in peace. 
Colossians 3:15 (CEV) 

How wonderful it is, how pleasant, for Gods 
people to live together in harmony! 

Psalm 133:1 (TEV) 


Life is meant to be shared. 

God intends for us to experience life together. The Bible calls this 
shared experience fellowship. Today, however, the word has lost 
most of its biblical meaning. “Fellowship” now usually refers to 
casual conversation, socializing, food, and fun. The question, 
“Where do you fellowship?” means “Where do you attend church?” 
“Stay after for fellowship” usually means “Wait for refreshments.” 

Real fellowship is so much more than just showing up at 
services. It is experiencing life together. It includes unselfish loving, 
honest sharing, practical serving, sacrificial giving, sympathetic 
comforting, and all the other “one another” commands found in 
the New Testament. 

When it comes to fellowship, size matters: Smaller is better. You 
can worship with a crowd, but you can’t fellowship with one. 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


138 


Once a group becomes larger than about ten people, someone 
stops participating—usually the quietest person—and a few 
people will dominate the group. 

Jesus ministered in the context of a small group of disciples. He 
could have chosen more, but he knew twelve is about the 
maximum size you can have in a small group if everyone is to 
participate. 

The Body of Christ, like your own body, is really a collection of 
many small cells. The life of the Body of Christ, like your body, is 
contained in the cells. For this reason, every Christian needs to be 
involved in a small group within their church, whether it is a 
home fellowship group, a Sunday school class, or a Bible study. 
This is where real community takes place, not in the big 
gatherings. If you think of your church as a ship, the small groups 
are the lifeboats attached to it. 

God has made an incredible promise about small groups of 
believers: “For where two or three have gathered together in My 
name, I am there in their midst.” 1 Unfortunately, even being in a 
small group does not guarantee you will experience real 
community. Many Sunday school classes and small groups are 
stuck in superficiality and have no clue as to what it’s like to 
experience genuine fellowship. What is the difference 
between real and fake fellowship? 

In real fellowship people experience 
authenticity. Authentic fellowship is not superficial, 
surface-level chit-chat. It is genuine, heart-to-heart, 
sometimes gut-level, sharing. It happens when people 
get honest about who they are and what is happening 
in their lives. They share their hurts, reveal their 
feelings, confess their failures, disclose their doubts, admit 
their fears, acknowledge their weaknesses, and ask for help and 
prayer. 

Authenticity is the exact opposite of what you find in some 
churches. Instead of an atmosphere of honesty and humility, there 



PURPOSE #2: You Were Formed for God’s Family 


139 


is pretending, role-playing, politicking, and superficial politeness 
but shallow conversation. People wear masks, keep their guard 
up, and act as if everything is rosy in their lives. These attitudes 
are the death of real fellowship. 

It is only as we become open about our fives that we experience 
real fellowship. The Bible says, “If we live in the light, as God is in 
the light, we can share fellowship with each other.... If we say we 
have no sin, we are fooling ourselves.” 2 The world thinks intimacy 
occurs in the dark, but God says it happens in the light. Darkness 

is used to hide our hurts, faults, 
fears, failures, and flaws. But in the 
light, we bring them all out into the 
open and admit who we really are. 

Of course, being authentic 
requires both courage and humility. 
It means facing our fear of 
exposure, rejection, and being hurt 
again. Why would anyone take such 
a risk? Because it is the only way to grow spiritually and be 
emotionally healthy. The Bible says, “Make this your common 
practice: Confess your sins to each other and pray for each other so 
that you can live together whole and healed.” 2 We only grow by 
taking risks, and the most difficult risk of all is to be honest with 
ourselves and with others. 

In real fellowship people experience mutuality. Mutuality is 
the art of giving and receiving. It’s depending on each other. The 
Bible says, “The way God designed our bodies is a model for 
understanding our lives together as a church: every part dependent 
on every other part.” 4 Mutuality is the heart of fellowship: 
building reciprocal relationships, sharing responsibilities, and 
helping each other. Paul said, “I want us to help each other with the 
faith we have. Tour faith will help me, and my faith will help you.” 2 

All of us are more consistent in our faith when others walk with 
us and encourage us. The Bible commands mutual accountability, 

The Purpose-Driven Life 140 


-——- 

Realfellowship happens 
when people get honest about 
who they are and what is 
happening in their lives. 

— - 



mutual encouragement, mutual serving, and mutual honoring. 6 
Over fifty times in the New Testament we are commanded to do 
different tasks to “one another” and “each other.” The Bible says, 
“Make every effort to do what leads to peace and to mutual 
edification.” 7 

You are not responsible for everyone in the Body of Christ, but 
you are responsible to them. God expects you to do whatever you 
can to help them. 

In real fellowship people experience sympathy. Sympathy is 
not giving advice or offering quick, cosmetic help; sympathy is 
entering in and sharing the pain of others. Sympathy says, “I 
understand what you’re going through, and what you feel is 
neither strange nor crazy.” Today some call this “empathy,” but 
the biblical word is “sympathy.” The Bible says, “As holy people ... 
be sympathetic, kind, humble, gentle, and patient. ” s 

Sympathy meets two fundamental human needs: the need to be 
understood and the need to have your feelings validated. Every 
time you understand and affirm someone’s feelings, you build 
fellowship. The problem is that we are often in so much of a 
hurry to fix things that we don’t have time to sympathize with 
people. Or we’re preoccupied with our own hurts. Self-pity dries 
up sympathy for others. 

There are different levels of fellowship, and each is appropriate 
at different times. The simplest levels of fellowship are the 
fellowship of sharing and the 
fellowship of studying God’s Word 
together. A deeper level is the 
fellowship of serving, as when we 
minister together on mission trips 
or mercy projects. The deepest, 
most intense level is the fellowship of 
suffering, 9 where we enter into each 

other’s pain and grief and carry each other’s burdens. The 
Christians who understand this level best are those around the 


Every time you understand 
and affirm someone’s feelings, 
you build fellowship. 


PURPOSE #2: You Were Formedfor God’s Family 


141 



world who are being persecuted, despised, and often martyred for 
their faith. 

The Bible commands: “Share each other’s troubles and problems, 
and in this way obey the law of Christ.” 10 It is in the times of deep 
crisis, grief, and doubt that we need each other most. When 
circumstances crush us to the point that our faith falters, that’s 
when we need believing friends the most. We need a small group 
of friends to have faith in God for us and to pull us through. In a 
small group, the Body of Christ is real and tangible even when 
God seems distant. This is what Job desperately needed during his 
suffering. He cried out, “A despairing man should have the 
devotion of his friends, even though he forsakes the fear of the 
Almighty.” 11 

In real fellowship people experience mercy. Fellowship is a 
place of grace, where mistakes aren’t rubbed in but rubbed out. 
Fellowship happens when mercy wins over justice. 

We all need mercy, because we all stumble and fall and require 
help getting back on track. We need to offer mercy to each other 
and be willing to receive it from each other. God says, “When 
people sin, you should forgive and comfort them, so they won’t give up 
in despair.” 12 

You can’t have fellowship without forgiveness. God warns, 
“Never hold grudges,” 13 because bitterness and resentment always 
destroy fellowship. Because we’re imperfect, 
day eighteen: sinful people, we inevitably hurt each other 

EXPERIENCING when we’re together for a long enough time. 
LIFE TOGETHER Sometimes we hurt each other intentionally 

and sometimes unintentionally, but either 
way, it takes massive amounts of mercy and grace to create and 
maintain fellowship. The Bible says, “You must make allowance for 
each other’s faults and forgive the person who offends you. 

Remember, the Lord forgave you, so you must forgive others. ” 14 

God’s mercy to us is the motivation for showing mercy to 
others. Remember, you will never be asked to forgive someone 


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142 



else more than God has already forgiven yon. Whenever yon are 
hurt by someone, you have a choice to make: Will I use my 
energy and emotions for retaliation or for resolution ? You can’t 
do both. 

Many people are reluctant to show mercy because they don’t 
understand the difference between trust and forgiveness. 
Forgiveness is letting go of the past. Trust has to do 
with future behavior. 

Forgiveness must be immediate, whether or not a 
person asks for it. Trust must be rebuilt over time. 

Trust requires a track record. If someone hurts you 
repeatedly, you are commanded by God to forgive 
them instantly, but you are not expected to trust them 
immediately, and you are not expected to continue allowing them 
to hurt you. They must prove they have changed over time. The 
best place to restore trust is within the supportive context of a 
small group that offers both encouragement and accountability. 

There are many other benefits you will experience in being a 
part of a small group committed to real fellowship. It is an 
essential part of your Christian life that you cannot overlook. For 
over 2,000 years Christians have regularly gathered in small 
groups for fellowship. If you’ve never been a part of a group or 
class like this, you really don’t know what you’re missing. 

In the next chapter we will look at what it takes to create this 
kind of community with other believers, but I hope this chapter 
has made you hungry to experience the authenticity, mutuality, 
sympathy, and mercy of real fellowship. You were created for 
community. 


PURPOSE #2: You Were Formedfor God’s Family 


143 


Day Eighteen 

Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: I need others in my life. 

I 

Verse to Remember: “Share each other’s troubles and 
problems, and in this way obey the law of Christ.” 

Galatians 6:2 (NLT) 

Question to Consider: What one step can I take today 
to connect with another believer at a more genuine, 
heart-to-heart level? 

__ __ ^_ ____ s 


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Cultivating Community 

You can develop a healthy, robust community 
that lives right with God and enjoy its 
results only if you do the hard work 
of getting along with each other, treating 
each other with dignity and honor. 

James 3:18 (Msg) 


They committed themselves to the teaching 
of the apostles, the life together, 
the common meal, and the prayers. 
Acts 2:42 (Msg) 


Community requires commitment. 

Only the Holy Spirit can create real fellowship between 
believers, but he cultivates it with the choices and commitments 
we make. Paul points out this dual responsibility when he says, 

“You are joined together with peace through the Spirit, so make every 
effort to continue together in this way.” 1 It takes both God’s power 
and our effort to produce a loving Christian community. 

Unfortunately, many people grow up in families with unhealthy 
relationships, so they lack the relational skills needed for real 
fellowship. They must be taught how to get along with and relate 


PURPOSE #2: You Were Formed for God’s Family 


145 


to others in God’s family. Fortunately, the New Testament is filled 
with instruction on how to share life together. Paul wrote, “ I am 
writing these things to you ... [so] you will know how to live in the 
family of God. That family is the church.” 2 

If you’re tired of fake fellowship and you would like to cultivate 
real fellowship and a loving community in your small group, 
Sunday school class, and church, you’ll need to make some tough 
choices and take some risks. 

Cultivating community takes honesty. You will have to care 
enough to lovingly speak the truth, even when you would rather 
gloss over a problem or ignore an issue. While it is much easier to 
remain silent when others around us are harming themselves or 
others with a sinful pattern, it is not the loving thing to do. Most 
people have no one in their lives who loves them 
enough to tell them the truth (even when it’s 
painful), so they continue in self-destructive ways. 
Often we know what needs to be said to someone, 
but our fears prevent us from saying anything. 

Many fellowships have been sabotaged by fear: No 
one had the courage to speak up in the group while a 
member’s life fell apart. 

The Bible tells us to “speak the truth in love” 3 
because we can’t have community without candor. Solomon said, 
“An honest answer is a sign of true friendship. ” 4 Sometimes this 
means caring enough to lovingly confront one who is sinning or 
is being tempted to sin. Paul says, “Brothers and sisters, if someone 
in your group does something wrong, you who are spiritual should go 
to that person and gently help make him right again.” 3 

Many church fellowships and small groups remain superficial 
because they are afraid of conflict. Whenever an issue pops up that 
might cause tension or discomfort, it is immediately glossed over 
in order to preserve a false sense of peace. Mr. “Don’t Rock the 
Boat” jumps in and tries to smooth everyone’s ruffled feathers, 
the issue is never resolved, and everyone lives with an underlying 



The Purpose-Driven Life 


14 6 


frustration. Everyone knows about the problem, but no one talks 
about it openly. This creates a sick environment of secrets where 
gossip thrives. Paul’s solution was straightforward: “No more lies, 
no more pretense. Tell your neighbor the truth. In Christ’s body we’re 
all connected to each other, after all. _ 

When you lie to others, you end up 
lying to yourself.” 6 

Real fellowship, whether in a 
marriage, a friendship, or your 
church, depends on frankness. In 
fact, the tunnel of conflict is the 
passageway to intimacy in any 
relationship. Until you care enough to confront and resolve the 
underlying barriers, you will never grow close to each other. 

When conflict is handled correctly, we grow closer to each other 
by facing and resolving our differences. The Bible says, “In the 
end, people appreciate frankness more than flattery.” 7 

Frankness is not a license to say anything you want, wherever 
and whenever you want. It is not rudeness. The Bible tells us 
there is a right time and a right way to do everything. 8 
Thoughtless words leave lasting wounds. God tells us to speak to 
each other in the church as loving family members: “Never use 
harsh words when you correct an older man, but talk to him as if he 
were your father. Talk to younger men as if they were your brothers, 
older women as if they were your mothers, and younger women as if 
they were your sisters.” 9 

Sadly, thousands of fellowships have been destroyed by a lack of 
honesty. Paul had to rebuke the Corinthian church for their passive 
code of silence in allowing immorality in their fellowship. Since no 
one had the courage to confront it, he said, “Ton must not simply 
look the other way and hope it goes away on its own. Bring it out in the 
open and deal with it.... Better devastation and embarrassment than 
damnation.... Ton pass it off as a small thing, but it’s anything but 
that.... you shouldn’t act as if everything is just fine when one of your 


When conflict is 
handled correctly, 
we grow closer to each other. 

— - 


PURPOSE #2: You Were Formed for God’s Family 


147 



Christian companions is promiscuous or crooked, is flip with God or 
rude to friends, gets drunk or becomes greedy and predatory. Tou can’t 
just go along with this, treating it as acceptable behavior. I’m not 
responsible for what the outsiders do, but don’t we have some 
responsibility for those within our community of believers'?” 10 

Cultivating community takes humility. Self-importance, 
smugness, and stubborn pride destroy fellowship faster than 
anything else. Pride builds walls between people; humility builds 
bridges. Humility is the oil that smoothes and soothes 
relationships. That’s why the Bible says, “Clothe yourselves with 
humility toward one another.” 11 The proper dress for fellowship is 
a humble attitude. 

The rest of that verse says, “... because, God opposes the proud 
but gives grace to the humble.” 12 This is the other reason we need 
to be humble: Pride blocks God’s grace in our lives, which we 
must have in order to grow, change, heal, and help others. We 
receive God’s grace by humbly admitting that we need it. The 
Bible says anytime we are prideful, we are living in opposition to 
God! That is a foolish and dangerous way to live. 

You can develop humility in very practical ways: by admitting 
your weaknesses, by being patient with others’ weaknesses, by 

being open to correction, and by 
pointing the spotlight on others. 
Paul advised, “Live in harmony with 
each other. Don’t try to act 
important, but enjoy the company of 
ordinary people. And don’t think you 
know it all!” 13 To the Christians in 
Philippi he wrote, “Give more honor 
to others than to yourselves. Do not be interested only in your own 
life, but be interested in the lives of others .” 14 

Humility is not thinking less of yourself; it is thinking of 
yourself less. Humility is thinking more of others. Humble people 
are so focused on serving others, they don’t think of themselves. 


- - 

Humility is not thinking 
less of yourself; it is thinking 
of yourself less. 

— - 


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148 



Cultivating community takes courtesy. Courtesy is 
respecting our differences, being considerate of each other’s 
feelings, and being patient with people who irritate us. The Bible 
says, “We must bear the ‘burden’ of being considerate of the doubts 
and fears of others.” 1 * Paul told Titus, “God’s 

people should be bighearted and courteous.” 16 day nineteen: 

In every church and in every small group, CULTIVATING 

there is always at least one “difficult” person, COMMUNITY 

usually more than one. These people may have 
special emotional needs, deep insecurities, irritating mannerisms, 
or poor social skills. You might call them EGR people—“Extra 
Grace Required.” 

God put these people in our midst for both their benefit and 
ours. They are an opportunity for growth and a test of fellowship: 

Will we love them as brothers and sisters and treat them with 
dignity? 

In a family, acceptance isn’t based on how smart or beautiful or 
talented you are. It’s based on the fact that we belong to each 
other. We defend and protect family. A family member may be a 
little goofy, but she’s one of us. In the same way, the Bible says, 

“Be devoted to each other like a loving family. Excel in showing 
respect for each other.” 17 

The truth is, we all have quirks and annoying traits. But 
community has nothing to do with compatibility. The basis for 
our fellowship is our relationship to God: We’re family. 

One key to courtesy is to understand where people are coming 
from. Discover their history. When you know what they’ve been 
through, you will be more understanding. Instead of thinking 
about how far they still have to go, think about how far they have 
come in spite of their hurts. 

Another part of courtesy is not downplaying other people’s 
doubts. Just because you don’t fear something doesn’t make it an 
invalid feeling. Real community happens when people know it is 
safe enough to share their doubts and fears without being judged. 


PURPOSE #2: You Were Formed for God’s Family 


149 


Cultivating community takes confidentiality. Only in the 
safe environment of warm acceptance and trusted confidentiality 
will people open up and share their deepest hurts, needs, and 
mistakes. Confidentiality does not mean keeping silent while your 
brother or sister sins. It means that what is shared in your group 
needs to stay in your group, and the group needs to deal with it, 
not gossip to others about it. 

God hates gossip, especially when it is thinly disguised as a 
“prayer request” for someone else. God says, “Gossip is spread by 

wicked people; they stir up trouble 
and break up friendships.” 1 * Gossip 
always causes hurt and divisions, 
and it destroys fellowship, and God 
is very clear that we are to confront 
those who cause division among 
Christians. 19 They may get mad and 
leave your group or church if you 
confront them about their divisive actions, but the fellowship of 
the church is more important than any individual. 

Cultivating community takes frequency. You must have 
frequent, regular contact with your group in order to build 
genuine fellowship. Relationships take time. The Bible tells us, 
“Let us not give up the habit of meeting together, as some are doing. 
Instead, let us encourage one another.” 20 We are to develop the 
habit of meeting together. A habit is something you do with 
frequency, not occasionally. You have to spend time with 
people— a lot of time —to build deep relationships. This is why 
fellowship is so shallow in many churches; we don’t spend enough 
time together, and the time we do spend is usually listening to 
one person speak. 

Community is built not on convenience (“we’ll get together 
when I feel like it”) but on the conviction that I need it for 
spiritual health. If you want to cultivate real fellowship, it will 
mean meeting together even when you don’t feel like it, because 


---- 

The fellowship of the church 
is more important than 
any individual. 


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150 



you believe it is important. The first Christians met together every 
day! “They worshiped together regularly at the Temple each day, met 
in small groups in homes for Communion, and shared their meals 
with great joy and thankfulness .” 21 Fellowship requires an 
investment of time. 

If you are a member of a small group or class, I urge you to 
make a group covenant that includes the nine characteristics of 
biblical fellowship: We will share our true feelings (authenticity), 
encourage each other (mutuality), support each other (sympathy), 
forgive each other (mercy), speak the truth in love (honesty), 
admit our weaknesses (humility), respect our differences, 
(courtesy), not gossip (confidentiality), and make group a priority 
(frequency). 

When you look at the list of characteristics, it is obvious why 
genuine fellowship is so rare. It means giving up our self- 
centeredness and independence in order to become 
interdependent. But the benefits of sharing life together far 
outweigh the costs, and it prepares us for heaven. 


Day Nineteen 

Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: Community requires commitment. 

Verse to Remember: “We understand what love is when 
we realize that Christ gave his life for us. That means we 
must give our lives for other believers.” 1 John 3:16 (GWT) 

Question to Consider: How can I help cultivate today 
the characteristics of real community in my small group 
and my church? 






PURPOSE #2: You Were Formed for God’s Family 









Restoring Broken Fellowship 

[God] has restored our relationship 
with him through Christ, and has given 
us this ministry of restoring relationships. 

2 Corinthians 5:18 (GWT) 


Relationships are always worth restoring. 

Because life is all about learning how to love, God wants us to 
value relationships and make the effort to maintain them instead of 
discarding them whenever there is a rift, a hurt, or a conflict. In fact, 
the Bible tells us that God has given us the ministry of restoring 
relationships. 1 For this reason a significant amount of the New 
Testament is devoted to teaching us how to get along with one 
another. Paul wrote, “Ifyou’ve gotten anything at all out of following 
Christ, if his love has made any difference in your life, if being in a 
community of the Spirit means anything to you,... Agree with each 
other, love each other, be deep-spirited friends .” 2 Paul taught that our 
ability to get along with others is a mark of spiritual maturity. 3 

Since Christ wants his family to be known for our love for each 
other, 4 broken fellowship is a disgraceful testimony to unbelievers. 


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152 


This is why Paul was so embarrassed that the members of the 
church in Corinth were splitting into warring factions and even 
taking each other to court. He wrote, “Shame on you! Surely there 
is at least one wise person in your fellowship who can settle a dispute 
between fellow Christians :” 5 He was shocked that no one in the 
church was mature enough to resolve the conflict peaceably. In 
the same letter, he said, “I’ll put it as urgently as I can: Tou must 
get along with each other .” 6 

If you want God’s blessing on your life and you want to be 
known as a child of God, you must learn to be a peacemaker. 
Jesus said, “God blesses those who work for peace, for they will be 
called the children of God .” 7 Notice Jesus didn’t say, “Blessed are 
the peace lovers,” because everyone loves peace. Neither did he 
say, “Blessed are the peaceable,” who are never disturbed by 
anything. Jesus said, “Blessed are those who work for peace”— 
those who actively seek to resolve conflict. Peacemakers are rare 
because peacemaking is hard work. 

Because you were formed to be a part of God’s family and the 
second purpose of your life on earth is to learn how to love and 
relate to others, peacemaking is one of the most important skills 
you can develop. Unfortunately, most of us were never taught 
how to resolve conflict. 

Peacemaking is not avoiding conflict. Running from a problem, 
pretending it doesn’t exist, or being afraid to talk about it 
is actually cowardice. Jesus, the Prince of Peace, was 
never afraid of conflict. On occasion he provoked it 
for the good of everyone. Sometimes we need to 
avoid conflict, sometimes we need to create it, and 
sometimes we need to resolve it. That’s why we must 
pray for the Holy Spirit’s continual guidance. 

Peacemaking is also not appeasement. Always giving 
in, acting like a doormat, and allowing others to always run 
over you is not what Jesus had in mind. He refused to back down 
on many issues, standing Inis ground in the face of evil opposition. 



PURPOSE #2: You Were Formed for God’s Family 


153 


How to Restore a Relationship 

As believers, God has “called us to settle our relationships with 
each other.” 8 Here are seven biblical steps to restoring fellowship: 

Talk to God before talking to the person. Discuss the 
problem with God. If you will pray about the conflict first instead 
of gossiping to a friend, you will often discover that either God 
changes your heart or he changes the other person without your 
help. All your relationships would go smoother if 
you would just pray more about them. 

As David did with his psalms, use prayer to 
ventilate vertically. Tell God your frustrations. 
Cry out to him. He’s never surprised or upset by 
your anger, hurt, insecurity, or any other 
emotions. So tell him exactly how you feel. 

Most conflict is rooted in unmet needs. Some of these needs 
can only be met by God. When you expect anyone—a friend, 
spouse, boss, or family member—to meet a need that only God 
can fulfill, you are setting yourself up for disappointment and 
bitterness. No one can meet all of your needs except God. 

The apostle James noted that many of our conflicts are caused 
by prayerlessness: “What causes fights and quarrels among you ?... 
Tou want something but don’t get it.... Ton do not have, because 
you do not ask God.” 9 Instead of looking to God, we look to 
others to make us happy and then get angry when they fail us. 
God says, “Why don’t you come to me first?” 

Always take the initiative. It doesn’t matter whether you are 
the offender or the offended: God expects you to make the first 
move. Don’t wait for the other party. Go to them first. Restoring 
broken fellowship is so important, Jesus commanded that it even 
take priority over group worship. He said, “If you enter your place 
of worship and, about to make an offering, you suddenly remember a 
grudge a friend has against you, abandon your offering, leave 
immediately, go to this friend and make things right. Then and only 
then, come back and work things out with God A 10 


DAY TWENTY: 

RESTORING 

BROKEN 

FELLOWSHIP 


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154 


When fellowship is strained or broken, plan a peace conference 
immediately. Don’t procrastinate, make excuses, or promise “I’ll 
get around to it someday.” Schedule a face-to-face meeting as 
soon as possible. Delay only deepens resentment and makes 
matters worse. In conflict, time heals nothing; it causes hurts to 
fester. 

Acting quickly also reduces the spiritual damage to you. The 
Bible says sin, including unresolved conflict, blocks our fellowship 
with God and keeps our prayers from being answered, 11 besides 
making us miserable. Job’s friends reminded him, “To worry 
yourself to death with resentment would be a foolish, senseless thing to 
do” and “You are only hurting yourself with your anger.” 12 

The success of a peace conference often depends on choosing 
the right time and place to meet. Don’t meet when either of you 
are tired or rushed or will be interrupted. The best time is when 
you both are at your best. 

Sympathize with their feelings. Use your ears more than your 
mouth. Before attempting to solve any disagreement you must 
first listen to people’s feelings. Paul 
advised, “Look out for one another’s 
interests, not just for your own.” 13 
The phrase “look out for” is the 
Greek word skopos, from which we 
form our words telescope and 
microscope. It means pay close 


--. 

God expects you to make 
the first move. 


— ■ 


attention! Focus on their feelings, not the facts. Begin with 
sympathy, not solutions. 

Don’t try to talk people out of how they feel at first. Just listen 
and let them unload emotionally without being defensive. Nod 
that you understand even when you don’t agree. Feelings are not 
always true or logical. In fact, resentment makes us act and think 
in foolish ways. David admitted, “When my thoughts were bitter 
and my feelings were hurt, I was as stupid as an animal. ” 14 We all 
act beastly when hurt. 


PURPOSE #2: You Were Formedfor God’s Family 


155 



In contrast, the Bible says, “A man’s wisdom gives him patience; 
it is to his glory to overlook an offense. ” 1 s Patience comes from 
wisdom, and wisdom comes from hearing the perspective of 
others. Listening says, “I value your opinion, I care about our 
relationship, and you matter to me.” The cliche is true: People 
don’t care what we know until they know we care. 

To restore fellowship “we must bear the ‘burden’ of being 
considerate of the doubts and fears of others.... Let’s please the other 
fellow, not ourselves, and do what is for his good. ” lb It is a sacrifice 
to patiently absorb the anger of others, especially if it’s 
unfounded. But remember, this is what Jesus did for you. He 
endured unfounded, malicious anger in order to save you: “Christ 
did not indulge his own feelings... as scripture says: The insults of 
those who insult you fall on me.” 17 

Confess your part of the conflict. If you are serious about 
restoring a relationship, you should begin with admitting your 

own mistakes or sin. Jesus said it’s the way to see things 
more clearly: “First get rid of the log from your own eye; 
then perhaps you will see well enough to deal with the 
speck in your friend’s eye.” 18 

Since we all have blind spots, you may need to 
ask a third party to help you evaluate your own 
actions before meeting with the person with whom 
you have a conflict. Also ask God to show you how 
much of the problem is your fault. Ask, “Am I the 
problem? Am I being unrealistic, insensitive, or too sensitive?” 

The Bible says, “If we claim that we’re free of sin, we’re only fooling 
ourselves.” 19 

Confession is a powerful tool for reconciliation. Often the way 
we handle a conflict creates a bigger hurt than the original 
problem itself. When you begin by humbly admitting your 
mistakes, it defuses the other person’s anger and disarms their 
attack because they were probably expecting you to be defensive. 
Don’t make excuses or shift the blame; just honestly own up to 



The Purpose-Driven Life 


156 


any part you have played in the conflict. Accept responsibility for 
your mistakes and ask for forgiveness. 

Attack the problem, not the person. You cannot fix the 
problem if you’re consumed with fixing the blame. You must 
choose between the two. The Bible says, “Agentle response defuses 
anger ; but a sharp tongue kindles a temper-fire A 20 You will never 
get your point across by being cross, so choose your words wisely. 
A soft answer is always better than a sarcastic one. 

In resolving conflict, how you say it is as important as what you 
say. If you say it offensively, it will be received defensively. God 


—- _—— . 

In resolving conflict, 
how you say it is as 
important as what you say. 


tells us, “A wise, mature person is 
known for his understanding. The 
more pleasant his words, the more 
persuasive he is.” 21 Nagging never 
works. You are never persuasive 
when you’re abrasive. 

During the Cold War, both sides 
agreed that some weapons were so 
destructive they should never be used. Today chemical and 
biological weapons are banned, and the stockpiles of nuclear 
weapons are being reduced and destroyed. For the sake of 
fellowship, you must destroy your arsenal of relational nuclear 
weapons, including condemning, belittling, comparing, labeling, 
insulting, condescending, and being sarcastic. Paul sums it up this 
way: “Do not use harmful words, but only helpful words, the kind 
that build up and provide what is needed, so that what you say will 
do good to those who hear you.” 22 

Cooperate as much as possible. Paul said, “Do everything 
possible on your part to live in peace with everybody.” 22 Peace always 
has a price tag. Sometimes it costs our pride; it often costs our 
self-centeredness. For the sake of fellowship, do your best to 
compromise, adjust to others, and show preference to what they 
need. 24 A paraphrase of Jesus’ seventh beatitude says, “You’re 
blessed when you can show people how to cooperate instead of compete 


PURPOSE #2: You Were Formed for God’s Family 


157 



or fight. That’s when you discover who you really are, and your place 
in God’s family. ” 2i 

Emphasize reconciliation, not resolution. It is unrealistic to 
expect everyone to agree about everything. Reconciliation focuses 
on the relationship, while resolution focuses on the problem. 
When we focus on reconciliation, the problem loses significance 
and often becomes irrelevant. 

We can reestablish a relationship even when we are unable to 
resolve our differences. Christians often have legitimate, honest 
disagreements and differing opinions, but we can disagree 
without being disagreeable. The same diamond looks different 
from different angles. God expects unity, not uniformity, and we 
can walk arm-in-arm without seeing eye-to-eye on every issue. 

This doesn’t mean you give up on finding a solution. You may 
need to continue discussing and even debating—but you do it in 
a spirit of harmony. Reconciliation means you bury the hatchet, 
not necessarily the issue. 

Who do you need to contact as a result of this chapter? With 
whom do you need to restore fellowship? Don’t delay another 

second. Pause right now and talk to 
God about that person. Then pick 
up the phone and begin the 
process. These seven steps are 
simple, but they are not easy. It 
takes a lot of effort to restore a 
relationship. That’s why Peter 
urged, “ Work hard at living in peace 
with others.” 2b But when you work for peace, you are doing what 
God would do. That’s why God calls peacemakers his children . 27 


-- -- 

Reconciliation focuses on the 
relationship, while resolution 
focuses on the problem. 

— - 


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158 



1 


^ - ------ - -- 

Day Twenty 

Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: Relationships are always worth 
restoring. 

Verse to Remember: “Do everything possible on your 
part to live in peace with everybody.” 

Romans 12:18 (TEV) 

Question to Consider: Who do I need to restore a 
broken relationship with today? 


PURPOSE #2: You Were Formedfor God’s Family 


159 








Protecting Your Church 


You are joined together with peace 
through the Spirit, so make every effort 
to continue together in this way 
Ephesians 43 (NCV) 

Most ofall, let love guide your life, 
for then the whole church will 
stay together in perfect harmony 
Colossians 3:14 (LB) 


It is your job to protect the unity of your church. 

Unity in the church is so important that the New Testament 
gives more attention to it than to either heaven or hell. God 
deeply desires that we experience oneness and harmony with each 
other. 

Unity is the soul of fellowship. Destroy it, and you rip the heart 
out of Christ’s Body. It is the essence, the core, of how God 
intends for us to experience life together in his church. Our 
supreme model for unity is the Trinity. The Father, Son, and Holy 
Spirit are completely unified as one. God himself is the highest 
example of sacrificial love, humble other-centeredness, and perfect 
harmony. 


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160 


Just like every parent, our heavenly Father enjoys watching his 
children get along with each other. In his final moments before 
being arrested, Jesus prayed passionately for our unity . 1 It was our 
unity that was uppermost in his mind during those agonizing 
hours. That shows how significant this subject is. 

Nothing on earth is more valuable to God than his church. He 
paid the highest price for it, and he wants it protected, especially 
from the devastating damage that is 
caused by division, conflict, and 
disharmony. If you are a part of 
God’s family, it is your 
responsibility to protect the unity 
where you fellowship. You are 
commissioned by Jesus Christ to do 


-- . 

Nothing on earth is more 
valuable to God than his church. 


• 


everything possible to preserve the unity, protect the fellowship, 
and promote harmony in your church family and among all 
believers. The Bible says, “ Make every effort to keep the unity of the 
Spirit through the bond of peace.” 2 How are we to do this? The 
Bible gives us practical advice. 

Focus on what we have in common, not our differences. 

Paul tells us, “Let us concentrate on the things which make for 
harmony, and on the growth of one another’s character.” 3 As 
believers we share one Lord, one body, one purpose, one Father, 
one Spirit, one hope, one faith, one baptism, and one love . 4 We 
share the same salvation, the same life, and the same future— 
factors far more important than any differences we could 
enumerate. These are the issues, not our personal differences, 
that we should concentrate on. 

We must remember that it was God who chose to give us 
different personalities, backgrounds, races, and preferences, so we 
should value and enjoy those differences, not merely tolerate 
them. God wants unity, not uniformity. But for unity’s sake we 
must never let differences divide us. We must stay focused on 
what matters most—learning to love each other as Christ has 


PURPOSE #2: Tou Were Formed for God’s Family 


161 



loved us, and fulfilling God’s five purposes for each of us and his 
church. 

Conflict is usually a sign that the focus has shifted to less 
important issues, things the Bible calls “disputable matters. ” 5 
When we focus on personalities, preferences, interpretations, 
styles, or methods, division always happens. But if we concentrate 
on loving each other and fulfilling God’s purposes, harmony 
results. Paul pleaded for this: “Let there be real harmony so there 
won’t be divisions in the church. I plead with you to be of one mind, 
united in thought and purpose.” 6 

Be realistic in your expectations. Once you discover what 
God intends real fellowship to be, it is easy to become 
discouraged by the gap between the ideal and the real in your 
church. Yet we must passionately love the church in spite of its 
imperfections. Longing for the ideal while criticizing the real is 
evidence of immaturity. On the other hand, settling for the real 
without striving for the ideal is complacency. Maturity is living 
with the tension. 

Other believers will disappoint you and let you down, but 
that’s no excuse to stop fellowshiping with them. They are your 

family, even when they don’t act 
like it, and you can’t just walk out 
on them. Instead God tells us, “Be 
patient with each other, making 
allowance for each other’s faults 
because of your love.” 7 

People become disillusioned 
with the church for many 
understandable reasons. The list could be quite long: conflict, 
hurt, hypocrisy, neglect, pettiness, legalism, and other sins. 
Rather than being shocked and surprised, we must remember 
that the church is made up of real sinners, including ourselves. 
Because we’re sinners, we hurt each other, sometimes 
intentionally and sometimes unintentionally. But instead of 


—--- 

We must passionately love 
the church in spite 
of its imperfections. 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


162 



leaving the church, we need to stay and work it out if at all 
possible. Reconciliation, not running away, is the road to 
stronger character and deeper fellowship. 

Divorcing your church at the first sign of disappointment or 
disillusionment is a mark of immaturity. God has things he wants 
to teach you, and others, too. Besides, there is no perfect church 
to escape to. Every church has its own set of weaknesses and 
problems. You’ll soon be disappointed again. 

Groucho Marx was famous for saying he wouldn’t want to 
belong to any club that would let him in. If a church must be 
perfect to satisfy you, that same perfection will exclude you from 
membership, because you’re not perfect! 

Dietrich Bonhoeffer, the German pastor who was martyred for 
resisting Nazis, wrote a classic book on fellowship, Life Together. 
In it he suggests that disillusionment with our local church is a 
good thing because it destroys our false expectations of 
perfection. The sooner we give up the illusion that a church must 
be perfect in order to love it, the sooner we quit pretending and 
start admitting we’re all imperfect and need grace. This is the 
beginning of real community. 

Every church could put out a sign “No perfect people need 
apply. This is a place only for those who admit they are sinners, 
need grace, and want to grow.” 

Bonhoeffer said, “He who loves his dream of community more 
than the Christian community itself becomes a destroyer of the 
latter. ... If we do not give thanks daily for the Christian 
fellowship in which we have been placed, even when there is no 
great experience, no discoverable riches, but much weakness, 
small faith, and difficulty; if on the contrary, we keep complaining 
that everything is paltry and petty, then we hinder God from 
letting our fellowship grow .” 8 

Choose to encourage rather than criticize. It is always easier 
to stand on the sidelines and take shots at those who are serving 
than it is to get involved and make a contribution. God warns us 


PURPOSE #2: You Were Formed for God’s Family 


163 


over and over not to criticize, compare, or judge each other . 9 
When you criticize what another believer is doing in faith and 
from sincere conviction, you are interfering with God’s business: 

“What right do you have to criticize someone else’s servants? Only 
their Lord can decide if they are doing right.” 10 

Paul adds that we must not stand in judgment or look down on 
other believers whose convictions differ from our own: “Why, 
then, criticise your brother’s actions, why try to make him look small 2 
We shall all be judged one day, not by each other’s standards or even 
our own, but by the standard of Christ.” 11 

Whenever I judge another believer, four things instantly happen: 
I lose fellowship with God, I expose my own pride and insecurity, I 
set myself up to be judged by God, and I harm the fellowship of 


the church. A critical spirit is a costly vice. 
The Bible calls Satan “the accuser of our 


DAY TWENTY-ONE: 


PROTECTING brothers.” 12 It’s the Devil’s job to blame, 


YOUR 

CHURCH 


complain, and criticize members of God’s family. 
Anytime we do the same, we’re being duped 
into doing Satan’s work for him. Remember, 


other Christians, no matter how much you disagree with them, 
are not the real enemy. Any time we spend comparing or 
criticizing other believers is time that should have been spent 
building the unity of our fellowship. The Bible says, “Let’s agree to 
use all our energy in getting along with each other. Help others with 
encouraging words; don’t drag them down by finding fault.” 12 

Refuse to listen to gossip. Gossip is passing on information 
when you are neither part of the problem nor part of the 
solution. You know spreading gossip is wrong, but you should 
not listen to it, either, if you want to protect your church. 
Listening to gossip is like accepting stolen property, and it makes 
you just as guilty of the crime. 

When someone begins to gossip to you, have the courage to 
say, “Please stop. I don’t need to know this. Have you talked 
directly to that person?” People who gossip to you will also gossip 


164 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


about you. They cannot be trusted. If you listen to gossip, God 
says you are a troublemaker . 14 “Troublemakers listen to 
troublemakers\” 15 “These are the ones who split churches, thinking 
only of themselves.” 16 

It is sad that in God’s flock, the greatest wounds usually come 
from other sheep, not wolves. Paul warned about “cannibal 
Christians” who “devour one another” and destroy the 
fellowship . 17 The Bible says these kind of troublemakers should be 
avoided. “Agossip reveals secrets; therefore do not associate with a 
babbler T 18 The fastest way to end a church or small group conflict 
is to lovingly confront those who are gossiping and insist they 
stop it. Solomon pointed out, “Tire goes out for lack of fuel, and 
tensions disappear when gossip stops.” 19 

Practice God’s method for conflict resolution. In addition 
to the principles mentioned in the last chapter, Jesus gave the 
church a simple three-step process: “If a fellow believer hurts you, 
go and tell him—work it out between the two of you. If he listens, 
you’ve made a friend. If he won’t listen, take one or two others along 
so that the presence of witnesses will keep things honest, and try 
again. If he still won’t listen, tell the church.” 20 

During conflict, it is tempting to complain to a third party 
rather than courageously speak the truth in love to the person 
you’re upset with. This makes the matter worse. Instead, you 
should go directly to the person involved. 

Private confrontation is always the first step, and you 
should take it as soon as possible. If you’re unable to 
work things out between the two of you, the next 
step is to take one or two witnesses to help confirm 
the problem and reconcile the relationship. What shouli 
you do if the person is still stuck in stubbornness? Jesus 
says to take it to the church. If the person still refuses to 
listen after that, you should treat that person like an unbeliever . 21 

Support your pastor and leaders. There are no perfect 
leaders, but God gives leaders the responsibility and the authority 



PURPOSE #2: You Were Formed for God’s Family 


165 


to maintain the unity of the church. During interpersonal 
conflicts that is a thankless job. Pastors often have the unpleasant 
task of serving as mediator between hurt, conflicting, or 
immature members. They’re also given the impossible task of 
trying to make everyone happy, which even Jesus could not do! 

The Bible is clear about how we are to relate to those who 
serve us: “Be responsive to your pastoral leaders. Listen to their 
counsel. They are alert to the condition of your lives and work under 

the strict supervision of God. 
Contribute to the joy of their 
leadership, not its drudgery. Why 
would you want to make things 
harder for themI” 22 

Pastors will one day stand before 
God and give an account of how 
well they watched over you. “They 
keep watch over you as men who must give an account.” 25 But you 
are accountable, too. You will give an account to God of how well 
you followed your leaders. 

The Bible gives pastors very specific instructions on how to 
deal with divisive people in the fellowship. They are to avoid 
arguing, gently teach the opposition while praying they’ll change, 
warn those who are argumentative, plead for harmony and unity, 
rebuke those who are disrespectful of leadership, and remove 
divisive people from the church if they ignore two warnings . 24 

We protect the fellowship when we honor those who serve us 
by leading. Pastors and elders need our prayers, encouragement, 
appreciation, and love. We are commanded, “Honor those leaders 
who work so hard for you, who have been given the responsibility of 
urging and guiding you along in your obedience. Overwhelm them 
with appreciation and love!” 25 

I challenge you to accept your responsibility to protect and 
promote the unity of your church. Put your full effort into it, and 
God will be pleased. It will not always be easy. Sometimes you will 


——-——- 

We protect the fellowship 
when we honor those 
who serve us by leading. 

— - 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


166 



have to do what’s best for the Body, not yourself, showing 
preference to others. That’s one reason God puts us in a church 
family—to learn unselfishness. In community we learn to say 
“we” instead of “I,” and “our” instead of “mine.” God says, 
a Don’t think only of your own good. Think of other Christians and 
what is best for them.” 26 

God blesses churches that are unified. At Saddleback Church, 
every member signs a covenant that includes a promise to protect 
the unity of our fellowship. As a result, the church has never had a 
conflict that split the fellowship. Just as important, because it is a 
loving, unified fellowship, a lot of people want to be a part of it! 
In the past seven years, the church has baptized over 9,100 new 
believers. When God has a bunch of baby believers he wants to 
deliver, he looks for the warmest incubator church he can find. 

What are you doing personally to make your church family 
more warm and loving? There are many people in your 
community who are looking for love and a place to belong. The 
truth is, everyone needs and wants to be loved, and when people 
find a church where members genuinely love and care for each 
other, you would have to lock the doors to keep them away. 


Day Twenty-one 
Thinking about My Purpose 

I 

Point to Ponder: It is my responsibility to protect the 
unity of my church. 

Verse to Remember: “Let us concentrate on the things 
which make for harmony and the growth of our fellowship 
together.” Romans 14:19 (Ph) 

i 

Question to Consider: What am I personally doing to 
protect unity in my church family right now? 

_ _ , _ -- , - 


PURPOSE #2: You Were Formed for God's Family 


167 










PURPOSE #3 



YOU WERE CREATED 
TO BECOME LIKE CHRIST 

Let your roots grow down into Christ 
and draw up nourishment from him. 

See that you go on growing in the Lord, 
and become strong and vigorous in the truth. 
Colossians 2:7 (LB) 



Created to Become Like Christ 


God knew what he was doing from the 
very beginning. He decided from the outset 
to shape the lives of those who love him 
along the same lines as the life of his Son.... 
We see the original and intended shape 
of our lives there in him. 

Romans 8:29 (Msg) 


We look at this Son and see God’s original 
purpose in everything created. 
Colossians 1:15 (Msg) 


You were created to become like Christ. 

From the very beginning, God’s plan has been to make you like 
his Son, Jesus. This is your destiny and the third purpose of your 
life. God announced this intention at Creation: “Then God said, 
c Let us make human beings in our image and likeness.’” 1 

In all of creation, only human beings, are made “in God’s 
image.” This is a great privilege and gives us dignity. We don’t 
know all this phrase covers, but we do know some of the aspects 
it includes: Like God, we are spiritual beings —our spirits are 


171 


PURPOSE # 3 : You Were Created to Become Like Christ 


immortal and will oudast our earthly bodies; we are intellectual — 
we can think, reason, and solve problems; like God, we are 
relational —we can give and receive real love; and we have a 
moral consciousness —we can discern right front wrong, which 
makes us accountable to God. 

The Bible says that all people, not just believers, possess part of 
the image of God; that is why murder and abortion are wrong. 2 
But the image is incomplete and has been damaged and distorted 
by sin. So God sent Jesus on a mission to restore the full image 
that we have lost. 

What does the full “image and likeness” of God look like? It 
looks like Jesus Christ! The Bible says Jesus is “the exact likeness of 
God,” “the visible image of the invisible God,” and a the exact 
representation of his being.” 2 

People often use the phrase “like father, like son ” to refer to 
family resemblance. When people see my likeness in my kids, it 
pleases me. God wants his children to bear his image and likeness, 
too. The Bible says, “Ton were ... created to be like God, truly 
righteous and holy. ” 4 

Let me be absolutely clear: You will never become God, or 
even a god. That prideful lie is Satan’s oldest temptation. Satan 
promised Adam and Eve that if they followed his advice, 

“ye shall be as gods.” 2 Many religions and New Age 
philosophies still promote this old lie that we are 
divine or can become gods. 

This desire to be a god shows up every time we 
try to control our circumstances, our future, and 
people around us. But as creatures, we will never 
be the Creator. God doesn’t want you to become a 
god; he wants you to become godly —taking on Inis values, 
attitudes, and character. The Bible says, “Take on an entirely new 
way of life—a God-fashioned life, a life renewed from the inside and 
working itself into your conduct as God accurately reproduces his 
character in you. ” 6 



The Purpose-Driven Life 


172 


God’s ultimate goal for your life on earth is not comfort, but 
character development. He wants you to grow up spiritually and 
become like Christ. Becoming like Christ does not mean losing 
your personality or becoming a mindless clone. God created your 
uniqueness, so he certainly doesn’t want to destroy it. 
Christlikeness is all about transforming your character, not your 
personality. 

God wants you to develop the kind of character described in 
the beatitudes of Jesus, 7 the fruit of the Spirit, 8 Paul’s great 
chapter on love, 9 and Peter’s list of 
the characteristics of an effective 
and productive life. 10 Every time 
you forget that character is one of 
God’s purposes for your life, you 
will become frustrated by your 
circumstances. You’ll wonder, 

“Why is this happening to me? Why 
am I having such a difficult time?” One answer is that life is 
supposed to be difficult! It’s what enables us to grow. Remember, 
earth is not heaven! 

Many Christians misinterpret Jesus’ promise of the “abundant 
life” 11 to mean perfect health, a comfortable lifestyle, constant 
happiness, full realization of your dreams, and instant relief from 
problems through faith and prayer. In a word, they expect the 
Christian life to be easy. They expect heaven on earth. 

This self-absorbed perspective treats God as a genie who simply 
exists to serve you in your selfish pursuit of personal fulfillment. 
But God is not your servant, and if you fall for the idea that life is 
supposed to be easy, either you will become severely disillusioned 
or you will live in denial of reality. 

Never forget that life is not about you! You exist for God’s 
purposes, not vice versa. Why would God provide heaven on earth 
when he’s planned the real thing for you in eternity? God gives us 
our time on earth to build and strengthen our character for heaven. 


— - 

God’s ultimate goal for your 
life on earth is not comfort, 
hut character development. 

— - 


PURPOSE #j: You Were Created to Become Like Christ 


173 



God’s Spirit Working in You 

It is the Holy Spirit’s job to produce Christlike character in 
you. The Bible says, “As the Spirit of the Lord works within us, we 
become more and more like him and reflect his glory even more.” 11 
This process of changing us to be more like Jesus is called 
sanctification , and it is the third purpose of your life on earth. 

You cannot reproduce the character of Jesus on your own 
strength. New Year’s resolutions, willpower, and best intentions 
are not enough. Only the Holy Spirit has the power to make the 
changes God wants to make in our lives. The Bible says, “God is 
working in you, giving you the desire to obey him and the power to do 
what pleases him.” 11 

Mention “the power of the Holy Spirit,” and many people 
think of miraculous demonstrations and intense emotions. But 
most of the time the Holy Spirit’s power is 
day twenty-two: released in your life in quiet, unassuming ways 

CREATED TO that you aren’t even aware of or can’t feel. He 
BECOME often nudges us with “agentle whisper.” 1 * 1 

LIKE CHRIST Christlikeness is not produced by imitation, 

but by inhabitation. We allow Christ to live 
through us. “For this is the secret: Christ lives in you. ” 15 How does 
this happen in real life? Through the choices we make. We choose 
to do the right thing in situations and then trust God’s Spirit to 
give us his power, love, faith, and wisdom to do it. Since God’s 
Spirit lives inside of us, these things are always available for the 
asking. 

We must cooperate with the Holy Spirit’s work. Through¬ 
out the Bible we see an important truth illustrated over and over: 
The Holy Spirit releases his power the moment you take a step of 
faith. When Joshua was faced with an impassible barrier, the 
floodwaters of the Jordan River receded only after the leaders 
stepped into the rushing current in obedience and faith. 16 
Obedience unlocks God’s power. 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


174 


God waits for you to act first. Don’t wait to feel powerful or 
confident. Move ahead in your weakness, doing the right thing in 
spite of your fears and feelings. This is how you cooperate with 
the Holy Spirit, and it is how your character develops. 

The Bible compares spiritual growth to a seed, a building, and a 
child growing up. Each metaphor requires active participation: 
Seeds must be planted and cultivated, buildings must be built— 
they don’t just appear—and children must eat and exercise to grow. 

While effort has nothing to do with your salvation, it has much 
to do with your spiritual growth. At least eight times in the New 
Testament we are told to “make every effort” 17 in our growth 
toward becoming like Jesus. You don’t just sit around and wait 
for it to happen. 

Paul explains in Ephesians 4:22-24 our three responsibilities in 
becoming like Christ. First, we must choose to let go of old ways 
of acting. “Everything ... connected with that old way of life has to 
go. It’s rotten through and through. Get rid ofit!” 1& 

Second, we must change the way we think. “Let the Spirit 
change your way of thinking.” 19 The Bible says we are 
“transformed” by the renewing of 
our minds. 20 The Greek word for 
transformed, metamorphosis (used 
in Romans 12:2 and 2 Corinthians 
3:18), is used today to describe the 
amazing change a caterpillar goes 
through in becoming a butterfly. It 
is a beautiful picture of what happens to us spiritually when we 
allow God to direct our thoughts: We are changed from the 
inside out, we become more beautiful, and we are set free to soar 
to new heights. 

Third, we must “put on” the character of Christ by developing 
new, godly habits. Your character is essentially the sum of your 
habits; it is how you habitually act. The Bible says, “Put on the 
new self created to be like God in true righteousness and holiness.” 21 


Your character is essentially 
the sum of your habits. 

- - 


PURPOSE #3: You Were Created to Become Like Christ 


175 



God uses his Word, people, and circumstances to mold us. 

All three are indispensable for character development. God’s 
Word provides the truth we need to grow, God’s people provide 
the support we need to grow, and circumstances provide the 
environment we need to practice Chrisdilceness. If you study and 
apply God’s Word, connect regularly with other believers, and 
learn to trust God in difficult circumstances, I guarantee you will 
become more like Jesus. We will look at each of these growth 
ingredients in the chapters ahead. 

Many people assume all that is needed for spiritual growth is 
Bible study and prayer. But some issues in life will never be 
changed by Bible study or prayer alone. God uses people. He 
usually prefers to work through people rather than perform 
miracles, so that we will depend on each other for fellowship. He 
wants us to grow together. 

In many religions, the people considered to be the most 
spiritually mature and holy are those who isolate themselves from 
others in mountaintop monasteries, uninfected by contact with 
other people. But this is a gross misunderstanding. Spiritual 
maturity is not a solitary, individual pursuit! You cannot grow to 
Christlikeness in isolation. You must be around other people and 
interact with them. You need to be a part of a church and 
community. Why? Because true spiritual maturity is all about 
learning to love like Jesus, and you can’t practice being like Jesus 
without being in relationship with other people. Remember, it’s 
all about love—loving God and loving others. 

Becoming like Christ is a long, slow process of growth. 
Spiritual maturity is neither instant nor automatic; it is a 
gradual, progressive development that will take the rest of your 
life. Referring to this process, Paul said, “This will continue 
until we are . . . mature, just as Christ is, and we will be 
completely like him. ” 22 

You are a work in progress. Your spiritual transformation in 
developing the character of Jesus will take the rest of your life, 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


176 


and even then it won’t be completed here on earth. It will only be 
finished when yon get to heaven or when Jesus returns. At that 
point, whatever unfinished work on your character is left will be 
wrapped up. The Bible says that when we are finally able to see 
Jesus perfectly, we will become perfectly like him: “We ccm’t even 
imagine what we will be like when Christ returns. But we do know 
that when he comes we will be like him, for we will see him as he 
really is.” 2 * 

Much confusion in the Christian life comes from ignoring the 
simple truth that God is far more interested in building your 
character than he is anything else. We worry when God seems 
silent on specific issues such as “What career should I choose?” 
The truth is, there are many 
different careers that could be in 
God’s will for your life. What God 
cares about most is that whatever 
you do, you do in a Christlike 
manner . 24 

God is far more interested in 
what you are than in what you do. 

We are human beings, not human doings. God is much more 
concerned about your character than your career, because you will 
take your character into eternity, but not your career. 

The Bible warns, “Don’t become so well-adjusted to your culture 
that you fit into it without even thinking. Instead, fix your attention 
on God. Ton’ll be changed from the inside out.... Unlike the culture 
around you, always dragging you down to its level of immaturity, 
God brings the best out of you, develops well-formed maturity in 
you.” 1 * You must make a counter-culture decision to focus on 
becoming more like Jesus. Otherwise, other forces like peers, 
parents, coworkers, and culture will try to mold you into their 
image. 

Sadly, a quick review of many popular Christian books reveals 
that many believers have abandoned living for God’s great 


God is far more interested 
in what you are 
than in what you do. 

- - 


PURPOSE #3: rbu Were Created to Become Like Christ 


177 



purposes and settled for personal fulfillment and emotional 
stability. That is narcissism, not discipleship. Jesus did not die on 
the cross just so we could live comfortable, well-adjusted lives. 

His purpose is far deeper: He wants to make us like himself before 
he takes us to heaven. This is our greatest privilege, our 
immediate responsibility, and our ultimate destiny. 


Day Twenty-two 
Thinking about My Purpose 

R 

Point to Ponder: I was created to become like Christ. 

I 

Verse to Remember: “As the Spirit of the Lord works 
within us, we become more and more like him and reflect 
his glory even more.” 2 Corinthians 3:18b (NLT) 

Question to Consider: In what area of my life do I 
need to ask for the Spirit’s power to be like Christ 
today? 

___ __ —- 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


178 









How We Grow 


God wants us to grow up... 
like Christ in everything. 
Ephesians. 4:15a (Msg) 

We are not meant to remain as children. 

Ephesians 4:14a (Ph) 


God wants you to grow up. 

Your heavenly Father’s goal is for you to mature and develop 
the characteristics of Jesus Christ. Sadly, millions of Christians 
grow older but never grow up. They are stuck in perpetual spiritual 
infancy, remaining in diapers and booties. The reason is that they 
never intended to grow. 

Spiritual growth is not automatic. It takes an intentional 
commitment. You must want to grow, decide to grow, make an 
effort to grow, and persist in growing. Discipleship—the process 
of becoming like Christ—always begins with a decision. Jesus 
calls us, and we respond: “‘Come, be my disciple,’ Jesus said to him. 
So Matthew got up and followed him.” 1 

When the first disciples chose to follow Jesus, they didn’t 
understand all the implications of their decision. They simply 


PURPOSE #J: Vou Were Created to Become Like Christ 


179 


responded to Jesus’ invitation. That’s all you need to get started: 
Decide to become a disciple. 

Nothing shapes your life more than the commitments you 
choose to make. Your commitments can develop you or they can 
destroy you, but either way, they will define you. Tell me what 
you are committed to, and I’ll tell you what you will be in twenty 
years. We become whatever we are committed to. 

It is at this point of commitment that most people miss God’s 
purpose for their lives. Many are afraid to commit to anything and 
just drift through life. Others make half-hearted commitments to 
competing values, which leads to frustration and mediocrity. 
Others make a full commitment to worldly goals, such as 
becoming wealthy or famous, and end up disappointed and bitter. 
Every choice has eternal consequences, so you had better choose 
wisely. Peter warns, “Since everything ciwund us is going to melt 
away, what holy, godly lives you should be living!” 2 

God’s part and your part. Christlikeness is the result of 
making Christlike choices and depending on his Spirit to help you 

fulfill those choices. Once you 
decide to get serious about 
becoming like Christ, you must 
begin to act in new ways. You will 
need to let go of some old routines, 
develop some new habits, and 
intentionally change the way you 
think. You can be certain that the Holy Spirit will help you with 
these changes. The Bible says, “Continue to work out your 
salvation with fear and trembling, for it is God who works in you to 
will and to act according to his good purpose. ” 3 

This verse shows the two parts of spiritual growth: “work out” 
and “work in.” The “ work out” is your responsibility, and the 
“work in”is God’s role. Spiritual growth is a collaborative effort 
between you and the Holy Spirit. God’s Spirit works with us, not 
just in us. 

The Purpose-Driven Life 180 


-- 

We become whatever 
we are committed to. 



This verse, written to believers, is not about how to be saved, 
but how to grow. It does not say “work for” your salvation, 
because you can’t add anything to what Jesus already did. During 
a physical “workout,” you exercise to develop your body, not to 
get a body. 

When you “work out” a puzzle, you already have all the 
pieces—your task is to put them together. Farmers “work” the 
land, not to get land, but to develop what they 

already have. God has given you a new life; now day twenty-three: 
you are responsible to develop it “with fear and HOW WE 

trembling. ” That means to take your spiritual GROW 

growth seriously! When people are casual about 
their spiritual growth, it shows they don’t understand the eternal 
implications (as we saw in chapters 4 and 5). 

Changing your autopilot. To change your life, you must 
change the way you think. Behind everything you do is a 
thought. Every behavior is motivated by a belief, and every action 
is prompted by an attitude. God revealed this thousands of years 
before psychologists understood it: “Be careful how you think; your 
life is shaped by your thoughts. 

Imagine riding in a speedboat on a lake with an automatic pilot 
set to go east. If you decide to reverse and head west, you have 
two possible ways to change the boat’s direction. One way is to 
grab the steering wheel and physically force it to head in the 
opposite direction from where the autopilot is programmed to 
go. By sheer willpower you could overcome the autopilot, but 
you would feel constant resistance. Your arms would eventually 
tire of the stress, you’d let go of the steering wheel, and the boat 
would instantly head back east, the way it was internally 
programmed. 

This is what happens when you try to change your life with 
willpower: You say, “I’ll force myself to eat less . . . exercise more 
. . . quit being disorganized and late.” Yes, willpower can produce 
short-term change, but it creates constant internal stress because 


PURPOSE #J: you Were Created to Become Like Christ 


181 


you haven’t dealt with the root cause. The change doesn’t feel 
natural, so eventually you give up, go off your diet, and quit 
exercising. You quickly revert to your old patterns. 

There is a better and easier way: Change your autopilot—the 
way you think. The Bible says, “Let God transform you into a new 
person by changing the way you think,” 5 Your first step in spiritual 
growth is to start changing the way you think. Change always 
starts first in your mind. The way you think determines the way 
you feel, and the way you feel influences the way you act. Paul said, 
“There must be a spiritual renewal of your thoughts and attitudes.” 6 

To be like Christ you must develop the mind of Christ. The 
New Testament calls this mental shift repentance, which in Greek 
literally means “to change your mind.” You repent whenever you 
change the way you think by adopting how God thinks—about 
yourself, sin, God, other people, life, your future, and everything 
else. You take on Christ’s outlook and perspective. 

We are commanded to “think the same way that Christ Jesus 
thought.” 7 There are two parts to doing this. The first half of this 
mental shift is to stop thinking immature thoughts, which are 
self-centered and self-seeking. The Bible says, “Stop thinking like 
children. In regard to evil be infants, but in your thinking be 


_ -- 

The way you think 
determines the way you feel, 
and the way you feel influences 
the way you act. 


— ■ 


adults.” 8 Babies by nature are 
completely selfish. They think only 
of themselves and their own needs. 
They are incapable of giving; they 
can only receive. That is immature 
thinking. Unfortunately, many 
people never grow beyond that 
kind of thinking. The Bible says 
that selfish thinking is the source of 


sinful behavior: “Those who live following their sinful selves think 
only about things that their sinful selves want. ” 9 

The second half of thinking like Jesus is to start thinking 
maturely, which focuses on others, not yourself. In his great 


182 


The Purpose-Driven Life 



chapter on what real love is, Paul concluded that thinking of 
others is the mark of maturity: “When I was a child, I talked like a 
child, I thought like a child, I reasoned like a child. When I became a 
man, 1 put childish ways behind me.” 10 

Today many assume that spiritual maturity is measured by 
the amount of biblical information and doctrine you 
know. While knowledge is one measurement of 
maturity, it isn’t the whole story. The Christian 
life is far more than creeds and convictions; it 
includes conduct and character. Our deeds must 
be consistent with our creeds, and our beliefs must 
be backed up with Christlike behavior. 

Christianity is not a religion or a philosophy, but a 
relationship and a lifestyle. The core of that lifestyle is 
thinking of others, as Jesus did, instead of ourselves. The Bible 
says, “We should think of their good and try to help them by doing 
what pleases them. Even Christ did not try to please himself.” 11 

Thinking of others is the heart of Christlikeness and the best 
evidence of spiritual growth. This kind of thinking is unnatural, 
counter-cultural, rare, and difficult. Fortunately we have help: 
“God has given us his Spirit. That’s why we don’t think the same way 
that the people of this world think.” 12 In the next few chapters we 
will look at the tools the Holy Spirit uses to help us grow. 



PURPOSE #3: You Were Created to Become Like Christ 


183 


Day Twenty-three 
Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: It is never too late to start growing. 

Verse to Remember: “Let God transform you inwardly 
by a complete change of your mind. Then you will be able 
to know the will of God—what is good and is pleasing to 
him and is perfect.” Romans 12:2b (TEV) 

Question to Consider: What is one area where I need 
to stop thinking my way and start thinking God’s way? 

. 


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184 









Transformed by Truth 

People need more than bread for their life; 
they must feed on every word of God. 
Matthew 4:4 (NLT) 

God’s... gracious Word 
can make you into what he wants 
you to be and give you everything 
you could possibly need. 

Acts 2032 (Msg) 


The truth transforms us. 

Spiritual growth is the process of replacing lies with truth. Jesus 
prayed, “Sanctify them by the truth;your word is truth.” 1 
Sanctification requires revelation. The Spirit of God uses the 
Word of God to make us like the Son of God. To become like 
Jesus, we must fill our lives with his Word. The Bible says, 
“Through the Word we are put together and shaped up for the tasks 
God has for us.” 2 

God’s Word is unlike any other word. It is alive. 3 Jesus said, 
“The words that I have spoken to you are spirit and are life.” A When 
God speaks, things change. Everything around you—all of 
creation—exists because “God said it.” He spoke it all into 


PURPOSE # 3 : You Were Created to Become Like Christ 


185 


existence. Without God’s Word you would not even be alive. 
James points out, “God decided to give us life through the word of 
truth so we might be the most important of all the things he made.” 5 

The Bible is far more than a 
doctrinal guidebook. God’s Word 
generates life, creates faith, 
produces change, frightens the 
Devil, causes miracles, heals hurts, 
builds character, transforms 
circumstances, imparts joy, 
overcomes adversity, defeats 
temptation, infuses hope, releases power, cleanses our minds, 
brings things into being, and guarantees our future forever! We 
cannot live without the Word of God! Never take it for granted. 
You should consider it as essential to your life as food. Job said, 
“I have treasured the words of his mouth more than my daily 
bread.” 6 

God’s Word is the spiritual nourishment you must have to fulfill 
your purpose. The Bible is called our milk, bread, solid food, and 
sweet dessert. 7 This four-course meal is the Spirit’s menu for 
spiritual strength and growth. Peter advises us, “Crave pure 
spiritual milk, so that by it you may grow up in your salvation ,” 8 

Abiding in God’s Word 

There are more Bibles in print today than ever before, but a 
Bible on the shelf is worthless. Millions of believers are plagued 
with spiritual anorexia, starving to death from spiritual 
malnutrition. To be a healthy disciple of Jesus, feeding on God’s 
Word must be your first priority. Jesus called it “abiding.” He 
said, “If you abide in My word, then you are truly disciples of 
Mine.” 9 In day-to-day living, abiding in God’s Word includes 
three activities. 

I must accept its authority. The Bible must become the 
authoritative standard for my life: the compass I rely on for 


--- 

The Spirit of God uses the 
Word of God to make us 
like the Son of God. 

— - 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


186 



direction, the counsel I listen to for making wise decisions, and 
the benchmark I use for evaluating everything. The Bible must 
always have the first and last word in my life. 

Many of our troubles occur because we base our choices on 
unreliable authorities: culture (“everyone is doing it”), tradition 
(“we’ve always done it”), reason (“it seemed logical”), or 
emotion (“it just felt right”). All four of these are flawed by the 
Fall. What we need is a perfect standard that will never lead us in 
the wrong direction. Only God’s Word meets that need. Solomon 
reminds us, a Every word of God is flawless,” 10 and Paul explains, 
“Everything in the Scriptures is God’s Word. All of it is useful for 
teaching and helping people and for correcting them and showing 
them how to live.” 11 

In the early years of his ministry, Billy Graham went through a 
time when he struggled with doubts about the accuracy and 
authority of the Bible. One moonlit night he dropped 
to his knees in tears and told God that, in spite of 
confusing passages he didn’t understand, from 
that point on he would completely trust the Bible 
as the sole authority for his life and ministry. From 
that day forward, Billy’s life was blessed with 
unusual power and effectiveness. 

The most important decision you can make today 
is to settle this issue of what will be the ultimate authority 
for your life. Decide that regardless of culture, tradition, reason, 
or emotion, you choose the Bible as your final authority. 
Determine to first ask, “What does the Bible say?” when making 
decisions. Resolve that when God says to do something, you will 
trust God’s Word and do it whether or not it makes sense or you 
feel like doing it. Adopt Paul’s statement as your personal 
affirmation of faith: “I believe everything that agrees with the Law 
and that is written in the Prophets.” 12 

I must assimilate its truth. It is not enough just to believe the 
Bible; I must fill my mind with it so that the Holy Spirit can 



PURPOSE # 3 : You Were Created to Become Like Christ 


187 


transform me with the truth. There are five ways to do this: You 
can receive it, read it, research it, remember it, and reflect on it. 

First, you receive God’s Word when you listen and accept it 
with an open, receptive attitude. The parable of the sower 
illustrates how our receptiveness determines whether or not God’s 
Word takes root in our lives and bears fruit. Jesus identified three 
unreceptive attitudes—a closed mind (hard soil), a superficial 
mind (shallow soil), and a distracted mind (soil with weeds)—and 
then he said, “Consider carefully how you listen T 13 

Anytime you feel you are not learning anything from a sermon 
or a Bible teacher, you should check your attitude, especially for 
pride, because God can speak through even the most boring 
teacher when you are humble and receptive. James advises, “In a 
humble (gentle, modest) spirit, receive and welcome the Word which 
implanted and rooted in your hearts contains the power to save your 
souls. 

Second, for most of the 2,000-year history of the church, only 
priests got to personally read the Bible, but now billions of us 
have access to it. In spite of this, many believers are more faithful 
to reading their daily newspaper than their Bibles. It’s no wonder 
we don’t grow. We can’t watch television for three hours, then 
read the Bible for three minutes and expect to grow. 

Many who claim to believe the 
Bible “from cover to cover” have 
never read it from cover to cover. 
But if you will read the Bible just 
fifteen minutes a day, you will read 
completely through it once a year. 

If you cut out one thirty-minute 
television program a day and read 
your Bible instead, you will read through the entire Bible twice a 
year. 

Daily Bible reading will keep you in range of God’s voice. This 
is why God instructed the kings of Israel to always keep a copy of 


———- 

Many who claim to believe the 
Bible “from cover to cover” have 
never read it from cover to cover. 

— - 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


188 



his Word nearby: “He should keep it with him all the time and read 
from it every day of his life.” 1 * But don’t just keep it near you; read 
it regularly! A simple tool that is helpful for this is a daily Bible 
reading plan. It will prevent you from just slopping around the 
Bible arbitrarily and overlooking sections. If you would like a 
copy of my personal Bible reading plan, see appendix 2. 

Third, researching, or studying, the Bible is another practical 
way to abide in the Word. The difference between reading and 
studying the Bible involves two additional activities: asking 
questions of the text and writing down your insights. You haven’t 
really studied the Bible unless you’ve written your thoughts down 
on paper or computer. 

Space does not allow me to explain the different methods of 
Bible study. Several helpful books on Bible study methods are 
available, including one I wrote over twenty years ago. 16 The 
secret of good Bible study is simply learning to ask the right 
questions. Different methods use different questions. You will 
discover far more if you pause and ask such simple questions as 
who? what? when? where? why? and how? The Bible says, “Truly 
happy people are those who carefully study God’s perfect law that 
makes people free, and they continue to study it. They do not forget 
what they heard, but they obey what God’s teaching says. Those who 
do this will be made happy. ” 17 

The fourth way to abide in God’s Word is by remembering it. 
Your capacity to remember is a God-given gift. You may think 
you have a poor memory, but the truth is, you have millions of 
ideas, truths, facts, and figures memorized. You remember what is 
important to you. If God’s Word is important, you will take the 
time to remember it. 

There are enormous benefits to memorizing Bible verses. It will 
help you resist temptation, make wise decisions, reduce stress, build 
confidence, offer good advice, and share your faith witii others. 18 

Your memory is like a muscle. The more you use it, the 
stronger it will become, and memorizing Scripture will become 


PURPOSE #j: You Were Created to Become Like Christ 


189 


easier. You might begin by selecting a few Bible verses out of this 
book that have touched you and writing them down on a small 
card you can carry with you. Then review them aloud throughout 
your day. You can memorize Scripture anywhere: while working 
or exercising or driving or waiting or at bedtime. The three keys 
to memorizing Scripture are review, review, and review! The Bible 
says, “Remember what Christ taught and let his words enrich your 
lives and make you wise.” 19 

The fifth way to abide in God’s Word is to reflect on it, which 
the Bible calls “meditation.” For many, the idea of meditating 
conjures up images of putting your mind in neutral and letting it 
wander. This is the exact opposite of biblical meditation. 
Meditation is focused thinking. It takes serious effort. You select a 
verse and reflect on it over and over in your 
mind. 

As I mentioned in chapter 11, if you know 
how to worry, you already know how to 
meditate. Worry is focused thinking on 
something negative. Meditation is doing the 
same thing, only focusing on God’s Word instead of your 
problem. 

No other habit can do more to transform your life and make 
you more like Jesus than daily reflection on Scripture. As we take 
the time to contemplate God’s truth, seriously reflecting on the 
example of Christ, we are “transformed into his likeness with ever- 
increasing glory. ” 20 

If you look up all the times God speaks about meditation in the 
Bible, you will be amazed at the benefits he has promised to those 
who take the time to reflect on his Word throughout the day. 

One of the reasons God called David “a man after my own 
heart” 21 is that David loved to reflect on God’s Word. He said, 
“How I love your teachings! I think about them all day long.” 22 
Serious reflection on God’s truth is a key to answered prayer and 
the secret to successful living. 23 


DAY TWENTY-FOUR: 

TRANSFORMED 
BY TRUTH 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


190 


I must apply its principles. Receiving, reading, researching, 
remembering, and reflecting on the Word are all useless if we fail 
to put them into practice. We must become “doers of the word.” 24 
This is the hardest step of all, because Satan fights it so intensely. 
He doesn’t mind you going to Bible studies as long as you don’t 
do anything with what yoti learn. 

We fool ourselves when we 
assume that just because we have 
heard or read or studied a truth, we 
have internalized it. Actually, you 
can be so busy going to the next 
class or seminar or Bible conference 
that you have no time to implement 
what you’ve learned. You forget it on the way to your next study. 
Without implementation, all our Bible studies are worthless. Jesus 
said, “Everyone who hears these words of mine and puts them into 
practice is like a wise man who built his house on the rock.” 25 Jesus 
also pointed out that God’s blessing comes from obeying the 
truth, not just knowing it. He said, “Now that you know these 
things, you will be blessed if you do them.” 26 

Another reason we avoid personal application is that it can be 
difficult or even painful. The truth will set you free, but first it 
may make you miserable! God’s Word exposes our motives, 
points out our faults, rebukes our sin, and expects us to change. 
It’s human nature to resist change, so applying God’s Word is 
hard work. This is why it is so important to discuss your personal 
applications with other people. 

I cannot overstate the value of being a part of a small Bible 
study discussion group. We always learn from others truths we 
would never learn on our own. Other people will help you see 
insights you would miss and help you apply God’s truth in a 
practical way. 

The best way to become a “doer of the Word” is to always 
write out an action step as a result of your reading or studying or 

191 


The truth will set you free, 
hut first it may make 
you miserable! 

— - 


PURPOSE #3: you Were Created to Become Like Christ 



reflecting on God’s Word. Develop the habit of writing down 
exactly what yon intend to do. This action step should be personal 
(involving you), practical (something you can do), and provable 
(with a deadline to do it). Every application will involve either 
your relationship to God, your relationship to others, or your 
personal character. 

Before reading the next chapter, spend some time thinking 
about this question: What has God already told you to do in his 
Word that you haven’t started doing yet? Then write down a few 
action statements that will help you act on what you know. You 
might tell a friend who can hold you accountable. As D. L. 

Moody said, “The Bible was not given to increase our knowledge 
but to change our lives.” 

i v **---1 

Day Twenty-four 

Thinking about My Purpose 

I 

Point to Ponder: The truth transforms me. 

I I 

Verse to Remember: “If you continue in my word, then 
are you my disciples indeed; and you shall know the truth, 
and the truth shall make you free.” John 8:31-32 (KJV) 

| 

Question to Consider: What has God already told me 
in his Word that I haven’t started doing yet? 

_ _ . _ , ___ _ . 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


192 








Transformed by Trouble 

For our light and momentary troubles 
are achieving for us an eternal glory 
that far outweighs them all. 

2 Corinthians 4:17 (NIV) 

It is the fire of suffering that 
brings forth the gold of godliness. 

Madame Guyon 


God has a purpose behind every problem. 

He uses circumstances to develop our character. In fact, he 
depends more on circumstances to make us like Jesus than he 
depends on our reading the Bible. The reason is obvious: You 
face circumstances twenty-four hours a day. 

Jesus warned us that we would have problems in the world. 1 
No one is immune to pain or insulated from suffering, and no 
one gets to skate through life problem-free. Life is a series of 
problems. Every time you solve one, another is waiting to take its 
place. Not all of them are big, but all are significant in God’s 
growth process for you. Peter assures us that problems are 
normal, saying, “Don’t be bewildered or surprised when you go 
through the fiery trials ahead, for this is no strange, unusual thing 
that is going to happen to you. ” 2 


PURPOSE #3: Vou Were Created to Become Like Christ 


193 


God uses problems to draw you closer to himself. The Bible 
says, “The Lord is close to the brokenhearted; he rescues those who are 
crushed in spirit. 3,3 Your most profound and intimate experiences 
of worship will likely be in your darkest days—when your heart is 
broken, when you feel abandoned, when you’re out of options, 
when the pain is great—and you turn to God alone. It is during 
suffering that we learn to pray our most authentic, heartfelt, 
honest-to-God prayers. When we’re in pain, we don’t have the 
energy for superficial prayers. 

Joni Eareckson Tada notes, “When life is rosy, we may slide by 
with knowing about Jesus, with imitating him and quoting him 
and speaking of him. But only in suffering will we know Jesus.” 

We learn things about God in suffering that we can’t learn any 
other way. 

God could have kept Joseph out of jail, 4 kept Daniel out of the 
lion’s den, 5 kept Jeremiah from being tossed into a slimy pit, 6 
kept Paul from being shipwrecked three times, 7 and kept the 
three Hebrew young men from being thrown into the blazing 

furnace 8 —but he didn’t. He let 
those problems happen, and every 
one of those persons was drawn 
closer to God as a result. 

Problems force us to look to God 
and depend on him instead of 
ourselves. Paul testified to this 
benefit: “We felt we were doomed to 
die and saw how powerless we were to 
help ourselves; but that was good, for then we put everything into the 
hands of God, who alone could save us.” 9 You’ll never know that 
God is all you need until God is all you’ve got. 

Regardless of the cause, none of your problems could happen 
without God’s permission. Everything that happens to a child of 
God is Father-filtered , and he intends to use it for good even 
when Satan and others mean it for bad. 


-— . 

Tour most profound 
and intimate experiences 
of worship will likely he 
in your darkest days. 

— - 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


194 



Because God is sovereignly in control, accidents are just 
incidents in God’s good plan for you. Because every day of your 
life was written on God’s calendar before you were born, 10 
everything that happens to you has spiritual significance. 
Everything! Romans 8:28-29 explains why: “We know that God 


causes everything to work together for 
the good of those who love God and 
are called according to his purpose for 
them. For God knew his people in 
advance, and he chose them to become 
like his Son.” 11 


--—_. 

Everything that happens to 
you has spiritual significance. 

— - 


Understanding Romans 8:28-29 

This is one of the most misquoted and misunderstood passages 
in the Bible. It doesn’t say, “God causes everything to work out 
the way I want it to.” Obviously that’s not true. It also doesn’t 
say, “God causes everything to work out to have a happy ending 
on earth.” That is not true either. There are many unhappy 
endings on earth. 

We live in a fallen world. Only in heaven is everything done 
perfectly the way God intends. That is why we are told to pray, 
“Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven. ” 12 To fully understand 
Romans 8:28-29 you must consider it phrase by phrase. 

“We know”: Our hope in difficult times is not based on 
positive thinking, wishful thinking, or natural optimism. It is a 
certainty based on the truths that God is in complete control of 
our universe and that he loves us. 

“that God causes”: There’s a Grand Designer behind 
everything. Your life is not a result of random chance, fate, or 
luck. There is a master plan. History is His story. God is pulling 
the strings. We make mistakes, but God never does. God cannot 
make a mistake—because he is God. 

“everything”: God’s plan for your life involves all that happens 
to you—including your mistakes, your sins, and your hurts. It 


PURPOSE #J: Vou Were Created to Become Like Christ 


195 



includes illness, debt, disasters, divorce, and death of loved ones. 
God can bring good out of the worst evil. He did at Calvary. 

“to work together”: Not separately or independently. The 
events in your life work together in God’s plan. They are not 
isolated acts, but interdependent parts of the process to make you 
like Christ. To bake a cake you must use flour, salt, raw eggs, 
sugar, and oil. Eaten individually, each is pretty distasteful or even 
bitter. But bake them together and they become delicious. If you 
will give God all your distasteful, unpleasant experiences, he will 
blend them together for good. 

“for the good”: This does not say that everything in life is 
good. Much of what happens in our world is evil and bad, but 
God specializes in bringing good out of it. In the official family 
tree of Jesus Christ, 13 four women are listed: Tamar, Rahab, Ruth, 
and Bathsheba. Tamar seduced her father-in-law to get pregnant. 
Rahab was a prostitute. Ruth was not even Jewish and broke the 
law by marrying a Jewish man. Bathsheba committed adultery 
with David, which resulted in her husband’s murder. These were 
not exactly sterling reputations, but God brought good out of 
bad, and Jesus came through their lineage. God’s purpose is 
greater than our problems, our pain, and even our sin. 

“of those who love God and are called”: This promise is only 
for God’s children. It is not for everyone. All things work for bad 
for those living in opposition to God and insist on having their 
own way. 

“according to his purpose”: What is that purpose? It is that 
we “become like his Son.” Everything God allows to happen in 
your life is permitted for that purpose! 

Building Christlilce Character 

We are like jewels, shaped with the hammer and chisel of 
adversity. If a jeweler’s hammer isn’t strong enough to chip off 
our rough edges, God will use a sledgehammer. If we’re really 
stubborn, he uses a jackhammer. He will use whatever it takes. 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


196 


Every problem is a character-building opportunity, and the 
more difficult it is, the greater the potential for building spiritual 
muscle and moral fiber. Paul said, “We know that these troubles 
produce patience. And patience produces character.” li What 
happens outwardly in your life is not as important as what 
happens inside you. Your circumstances are temporary, but your 
character will last forever. 

The Bible often compares trials 
to a metal refiner’s fire that burns 
away the impurities. Peter said, 

“These troubles come to prove that 
your faith is pure. This purity of faith 
is worth more than gold .” 15 A 
silversmith was asked, “How do 
you know when the silver is pure?” He replied, “When I see my 
reflection in it.” When you’ve been refined by trials, people can 
see Jesus’ reflection in you. James said, “Under pressure, your 
faith-life is forced into the open and shows its true colors.” 16 

Since God intends to make you like Jesus, he will take you 
through the same experiences Jesus went through. That includes 
loneliness, temptation, stress, criticism, rejection, and many other 
problems. The Bible says Jesus “learned obedience through 
suffering” and “was made perfect through suffering. ” 17 Why would 
God exempt us from what he allowed his own Son to experience? 
Paul said, “We go through exactly what Christ goes through. If we go 
through the hard times with him, then we’re certainly going to go 
through the good times with him!” l& 

Responding to Problems as Jesus Would 

Problems don’t automatically produce what God intends. 

Many people become bitter, rather than better, and never grow 
up. You have to respond the way Jesus would. 

Remember that God’s plan is good. God knows what is best 
for you and has your best interests at heart. God told Jeremiah, 


What happens outwardly in 
your life is not as important as 
what happens inside you. 

1 


PURPOSE # 3 : Uou Were Created to Become Like Christ 


197 



“The plans I have for you [are] plans to prosper you and not to harm 
you, plans to give you hope and a future.” 19 Joseph understood this 
truth when he told his brothers who had sold him into slavery, 
“Ton intended to harm me, but God intended it for good.” 20 
Hezekiah echoed the same sentiment about his life-threatening 
illness: “It was for my own good that I had such hard times.” 21 
Whenever God says no to your request for relief, remember, “God 
is doing what is best for us, training us to live God’s holy best.” 22 

It is vital that you stay focused on God’s plan, not your pain or 
problem. That is how Jesus endured the pain of the cross, and we 
are urged to follow his example: “Keep your eyes on Jesus, our 
leader and instructor. He was willing to die a shameful death on the 
cross because of the joy he knew would be his afterwards.” 22 Corrie 
ten Boom, who suffered in a Nazi death camp, explained the 
power of focus: “If you look at the world, you’ll be distressed. If 
you look within, you’ll be depressed. But if you look at Christ, 
you’ll be at rest!” Your focus will determine your feelings. 

The secret of endurance is to remember that your 
pain is temporary but your reward will be eternal. 
Moses endured a life of problems “because he was 
looking ahead to his reward. ” 24 Paul endured 
hardship the same way. He said, “Our present 
troubles are quite small and won’t last very long. Tet 
they produce for us an immeasurably great glory that 
will last forever!” 22 

Don’t give in to short-term thinking. Stay focused on the end 
result: “If we are to share his glory, we must also share his suffering. 
What we suffer now is nothing compared to the glory he will give us 
later.” 26 

Rejoice and give thanks. The Bible tells us to “give thanks in 
all circumstances, for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.” 27 
How is this possible? Notice that God tells us to give thanks “in 
all circumstances” not “for all circumstances.” God doesn’t expect 
you to be thankful for evil, for sin, for suffering, or for their 



The Purpose-Driven Life 


198 



painful consequences in the world. Instead, God wants you to 
thank him that he will use your problems to fulfill his purposes. 

The Bible says, “Rejoice in the Lord always.” 2 * It doesn’t say, 
“Rejoice over your pain.” That’s masochism. You rejoice “in the 
Lord.” No matter what’s happening, you can rejoice in God’s 
love, care, wisdom, power, and faithfulness. Jesus said, “Be full of 
joy at that time, because you have a great reward 
waiting for you in heaven.” 29 day twenty-five: 

We can also rejoice in knowing that God is TRANSFORMED 
going through the pain with us. We do not BY TROUBLE 

serve a distant and detached God who spouts 
encouraging cliches safely from the sideline. Instead, he enters 
into our suffering. Jesus did it in the Incarnation, and his Spirit 
does it in us now. God will never leave us on our own. 

Refuse to give up. Be patient and persistent. The Bible says, 

“Let the process go on until your endurance is fully developed, and 
you will find that you have become men of mature character ... with 
no weak spots.” 20 

Character building is a slow process. Whenever we try to avoid 
or escape the difficulties in life, we short-circuit the process, 
delay our growth, and actually end up with a worse kind of 
pain—the worthless type that accompanies denial and avoidance. 
When you grasp the eternal consequences of your character 
development, you’ll pray fewer “Comfort me” prayers (“Help me 
feel good”) and more “Conform me” prayers (“Use this to make 
me more like you”). 

You know you are maturing when you begin to see the hand of 
God in the random, baffling, and seemingly pointless 
circumstances of life. 

If you are facing trouble right now, don’t ask, “Why me?” 

Instead ask, “What do you want me to learn?” Then trust God 
and keep on doing what’s right. “You need to stick it out, staying 
with God’s plan so you’ll be therefor the promised completion.” 21 
Don’t give up—grow up! 


PURPOSE #3: You Were Created to Become Like Christ 


199 


Day Twenty-five 
Thinking about My Purpose 

Point to Ponder: There is a purpose behind every 
problem. 

Verse to Remember: “And we know that in all things 
God works for the good of those who love him, who have been 
called according to his purpose.” Romans 8:28 (NIV) 

i 

Question to Consider: What problem in my life has 
caused the greatest growth in me? 

_ , _ ____ * 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


200 








Growing through Temptation 

Happy is the man who doesn’t give in and 
do wrong when he is tempted, for afterwards 
he will get as his reward the crown of life that 
God has promised those who love him. 

James 1:12 (LB) 

My temptations have been 
my masters in divinity. 

Martin Luther 


Every temptation is an opportunity to do good. 

On the path to spiritual maturity, even temptation becomes a 
stepping-stone rather than a stumbling block when you realize 
that it is just as much an occasion to do the right thing as it is to 
do the wrong thing. Temptation simply provides the choice. 

While temptation is Satan’s primary weapon to destroy you, God 
wants to use it to develop you. Every time you choose to do good 
instead of sin, you are growing in the character of Christ. 

To understand this, you must first identify the character 
qualities of Jesus. One of the most concise descriptions of his 
character is the fruit of the Spirit: “When the Holy Spirit controls 
our lives, he will produce this kind of fruit in us: love, joy, peace, 


PURPOSE #_?; You Were Created to Become Like Christ 


201 


patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self- 
control.” 1 

These nine qualities are an expansion of the Great 
Commandment and portray a beautiful description of Jesus 
Christ. Jesus is perfect love, joy, peace, patience, and all the other 
fruit embodied in a single person. To have the fruit of the Spirit is 
to be like Christ. 

How, then, does the Holy Spirit produce these nine fruit in 
your life? Does he create them instantly? Will you wake up one 
day and be suddenly filled with these characteristics fully 
developed? No. Fruit always matures and ripens slowly. 

This next sentence is one of the most important spiritual truths 
you will ever learn: God develops the fruit of the Spirit in your life 
by allowing you to experience circumstances in which you’re 

tempted to express the exact opposite 
quality! Character development 
always involves a choice, and 
temptation provides that 
opportunity. 

For instance, God teaches us love 
by putting some unlovely people 
around us. It takes no character to 
love people who are lovely and 
loving to you. God teaches us real 
joy in the midst of sorrow, when we 
turn to him. Happiness depends on external circumstances, but 
joy is based on your relationship to God. 

God develops real peace within us, not by making things go the 
way we planned, but by allowing times of chaos and confusion. 
Anyone can be peaceful watching a beautiful sunset or relaxing on 
vacation. We learn real peace by choosing to trust God in 
circumstances in which we are tempted to worry or be afraid. 
Likewise, patience is developed in circumstances in which we’re 
forced to wait and are tempted to be angry or have a short fuse. 


God develops the fruit of the 
Spirit by allowing you to 
experience circumstances in 
which you’re tempted to express 
the exact opposite quality! 

- - 


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202 



God uses the opposite situation of each fruit to allow us a 
choice. You can’t claim to be good if you’ve never been tempted 
to be bad. You can’t claim to be faithful if you’ve never had the 
opportunity to be unfaithful. Integrity is built by defeating the 
temptation to be dishonest; humility grows when we refuse to be 
pridefril; and endurance develops every time you reject the 
temptation to give up. Every time you defeat a 
temptation, you become more like Jesus! 

How Temptation Works 

It helps to know that Satan is entirely 
predictable. He has used the same strategy and old 
tricks since Creation. All temptations follow the 
same the pattern. That’s why Paul said, “We are very 
familiar with his evil schemes.” 2 From the Bible we learn that 
temptation follows a four-step process, which Satan used both on 
Adam and Eve and on Jesus. 

In step one, Satan identifies a desire inside of you. It may be a 
sinful desire, like the desire to get revenge or to control others, or 
it may be a legitimate, normal desire, like the desire to be loved 
and valued or to feel pleasure. Temptation starts when Satan 
suggests (with a thought) that you give in to an evil desire, or 
that you fulfill a legitimate desire in a wrong way or at the wrong 
time. Always beware of shortcuts. They are often temptations! 
Satan whispers, “You deserve it! You should have it now! It will 
be exciting . . . comforting ... or make you feel better.” 

We think temptation lies around us, but God says it begins 
within us. If you didn’t have the internal desire, the temptation 
could not attract you. Temptation always starts in your mind, not 
in circumstances. Jesus said, “For from within, out of a person’s 
heart, come evil thoughts, sexual immorality, theft, murder, adultery, 
greed, wickedness, deceit, eagerness for lustful pleasure, envy, slander, 
pride, and foolishness. All these vile things come from within.” 2 James 
tells us that there is “a whole army of evil desires within you.” 4 



PURPOSE #3: you Were Created to Become Like Christ 


203 


Step two is doubt. Satan tries to get you to doubt what God has 
said about the sin: Is it really wrong? Did God really say not to do 
it? Didn’t God mean this prohibition for someone else or some 

other time? Doesn’t God want me 
to be happy? The Bible warns, 
“Watch out! Don’t let evil thoughts or 
doubts make any of you turn from the 
living God.” s 

Step three is deception. Satan is 
incapable of telling the truth and is 
called “the Father of lies.” 6 Anything 
he tells you will be untrue or just half-true. Satan offers his lie to 
replace what God has already said in his Word. Satan says, “You 
will not die. You’ll be wiser like God. You can get away with it. 

No one will ever know. It will solve your problem. Besides, 
everyone else is doing it. It is only a little sin.” But a little sin is 
like being a little pregnant: It will eventually show itself. 

Step four is disobedience. You finally act on the thought you’ve 
been toying with in your mind. What began as an idea gets 
birthed into behavior. You give in to whatever got your attention. 
You believe Satan’s lies and fall into the trap that James warns 
about: “We are tempted when we are drawn away and trapped by 
our own evil desires. Then our evil desires conceive and give birth to 
sin; and sin, when it is full-grown, gives birth to death. Do not be 
deceived, my dear friends!” 7 

Overcoming Temptation 

Understanding how temptation works is in itself helpful, but 
there are specific steps you need to take to overcome it. 

Refuse to be intimidated. Many Christians are frightened and 
demoralized by tempting thoughts, feeling guilty that they aren’t 
“beyond” temptation. They feel ashamed just for being tempted. 
This is a misunderstanding of maturity. You will never outgrow 
temptation. 

The Purpose-Driven Life 204 


---- 

We think temptation lies 
around us, but God says 
it begins within us. 



In one sense you can consider temptation a compliment. Satan 
does not have to tempt those who are already doing his evil will; 
they are already his. Temptation is a sign that Satan hates you, not 
a sign of weakness or worldliness. It is also a normal part of being 
human and living in a fallen world. Don’t be surprised or shocked 
or discouraged by it. Be realistic about the inevitability of 
temptation; you will never be able to avoid it completely. The 
Bible says, “When you’re tempted,. . .” not if. Paul advises, 
a Remember that the temptations that come into your life are no 
different from what others experience 

It is not a sin to be tempted. Jesus was tempted, yet he never 
sinned . 9 Temptation only becomes a sin when you give in to it. 
Martin Luther said, “You cannot keep birds from flying over your 
head but you can keep them from building a nest in your hair.” 
You can’t keep the Devil from suggesting thoughts, but you can 
choose not to dwell or act on them. 

For example, many people don’t know the difference between 
physical attraction or sexual arousal, and lust. They are not the 
same. God made every one of us a 
sexual being, and that is good. 

Attraction and arousal are the 
natural, spontaneous, God-given 
responses to physical beauty, while 
lust is a deliberate act of the will. 

Lust is a choice to commit in your 
mind what you’d like to do with 
your body. You can be attracted or even aroused without 
choosing to sin by lusting. Many people, especially Christian men, 
feel guilty that their God-given hormones are working. When 
they automatically notice an attractive woman, they assume it is 
lust and feel ashamed and condemned. But attraction is not lust 
until you begin to dwell on it. 

Actually, the closer you grow to God, the more Satan will try 
to tempt you. The moment you became God’s child, Satan, like a 


— - -- 

Temptation is a sign that 
Satan hates you, not a sign 
of weakness or worldliness. 


PURPOSE # 3 : rbu Were Created to Become Like Christ 


205 



mobster hit man, put out a “contract” on you. You are his enemy, 
and he’s plotting your downfall. 

Sometimes while you are praying, Satan will suggest a bizarre or 
evil thought just to distract you and shame you. Don’t be alarmed 
or ashamed by this, but realize that Satan fears your prayers and 
will try anything to stop them. Instead of condemning yourself 
with “How could I think such a thought?” treat it as a distraction 
from Satan and immediately refocus on God. 

Recognize your pattern of temptation and be prepared for 
it. There are certain situations that make you more vulnerable to 
temptation than others. Some circumstances will cause you to 
stumble almost immediately, while others don’t bother you much. 
These situations are unique to your weaknesses, and you need to 
identify them because Satan surely knows them! He knows 
exactly what trips you up, and he is constantly 
working to get you into those circumstances. Peter 
warns, “Stay alert. The Devil is poised to pounce, and 
would like nothing better than to catch you 
napping,” 10 

Ask yourself, “ When am I most tempted? What 
day of the week? What time of day?” Ask, “ Where am I 
most tempted? At work? At home? At a neighbor’s house? At a 
sports bar? In an airport or motel out of town?” 

Ask, “ Who is with me when I’m most tempted? Friends? 
Coworkers? A crowd of strangers? When I’m alone?” Also ask, 

“How do I usually feel when I am most tempted?” It may be when 
you are tired or lonely or bored or depressed or under stress. It 
may be when you’ve been hurt or angry or worried, or after a big 
success or spiritual high. 

You should identify your typical pattern of temptation and then 
prepare to avoid those situations as much as possible. The Bible 
tells us repeatedly to anticipate and be ready to face temptation . 11 
Paul said, “Don’tgive the Devil a chance.” 12 Wise planning reduces 
temptation. Follow the advice of Proverbs: “Plan carefully what 



The Purpose-Driven Life 


20 6 


you do.... Avoid evil and walk straight ahead. Don’t go one step off 
the right way. ” 13 “God’s people avoid evil ways, and they protect 
themselves by watching where theygo.” 1A 

Request God’s help. Heaven has a twenty-four-hour 
emergency hot line. God wants you to ask him for assistance in 
overcoming temptation. He says, “Call on me in 
times of trouble. I will rescue you, and you will day twenty-six: 


honor me.” 1 * 


GROWING 

THROUGH 

TEMPTATION 


I call this a “microwave” prayer because it is 
quick and to the point: Help! SOS! Mayday! 


When temptation strikes, you don’t have time 
for a long conversation with God; you simply cry out. David, 
Daniel, Peter, Paul, and millions of others have prayed this land 
of instant prayer for help in trouble. 

The Bible guarantees that our cry for help will be heard 
because Jesus is sympathetic to our struggle. He faced the same 
temptations we do. He “understands our weaknesses, for he faced 
all of the same temptations we do, yet he did not sin.” 16 

If God is waiting to help us defeat temptation, why don’t we 
turn to him more often? Honestly, sometimes we don’t want to 
be helped! We want to give in to temptation even though we 
know it’s wrong. At that moment we think we know what’s best 
for us more than God does. 

At other times we’re embarrassed to ask God for help because 
we keep giving in to the same temptation over and over. But God 
never gets irritated, bored, or impatient when we keep coming 
back to him. The Bible says, “Let us have confidence, then, and 
approach God’s throne, where there is grace. There we will receive 
mercy and find grace to help us just when we need it.” 17 

God’s love is everlasting, and his patience endures forever. If 
you have to cry out for God’s help two hundred times a day to 
defeat a particular temptation, he will still be eager to give mercy 
and grace, so come boldly. Ask him for the power to do the right 
thing and then expect him to provide it. 


PURPOSE # 3 : you Were Created to Become Like Christ 


207 


Temptations keep us dependent upon God. Just as the roots 
grow stronger when wind blows against a tree, so every time you 
stand up to a temptation you become more like Jesus. When you 
stumble—which you will—it is not fatal. Instead of giving in or 
giving up, look up to God, expect him to help you, and 
remember the reward that is waiting for you: “When people are 
tempted and still continue strong, they should be happy. After they 
have proved their faith, God will reward them with life forever.” 1 * 

-- - — - ---—--- 

Day Twenty-six 
Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: Every temptation is an opportunity to 
do good. 

j 

Verse to Remember: “God blesses the people who 
patiently endure testing. Afterward they will receive the 
crown of life that God has promised to those who love him.” 

James 1:12 (NLT) 

Question to Consider: What Christlike character 
quality can I develop by defeating the most common 
temptation I face? 




The Purpose-Driven Life 


208 








Defeating Temptation 


Run from anything that gives you the 
evil thoughts.. .but stay close to anything 
that makes you want to do right. 

2 Timothy 2:22 (LB) 


Remember that the temptations that come 
into your life are no different from what others 
experience. And God is faithful. He will keep 
the temptation from becoming so strong 
that you can’t stand up against it. 

When you are tempted, he will show you 
a way out so that you will not give in to it. 


i Corinthians 10:13 (NLT) 


There is always a way out. 

You may sometimes feel that a temptation is too overpowering 
for you to bear, but that’s a lie from Satan. God has promised 
never to allow more on you than he puts within you to handle it. 
He will not permit any temptation that you could not overcome. 
However, you must do your part too by practicing four biblical 
keys to defeating temptation. 


PURPOSE # 3 : You Were Created to Become Like Christ 


209 


Refocus your attention on something else. It may surprise 
you that nowhere in the Bible are we told to “resist temptation.” 
We are told to “resist the devil,” 1 but that is very different, as I’ll 
explain later. Instead, we are advised to refocus our attention 
because resisting a thought doesn’t work. It only intensifies our 
focus on the wrong thing and strengthens its allure. Let me 
explain: 

Every time you try to block a thought out of your mind, you 
drive it deeper into your memory. By resisting it, you actually 
reinforce it. This is especially true with temptation. You don’t 
defeat temptation by fighting the feeling of it. The more you fight 

a feeling, the more it consumes and 
controls you. You strengthen it 
every time you think it. 

Since temptation always begins 
with a thought, the quickest way to 
neutralize its allure is to turn your 
attention to something else. Don’t 
fight the thought, just change the 
channel of your mind and get interested in another idea. This is 
the first step in defeating temptation. 

The battle for sin is won or lost in your mind. Whatever gets 
your attention will get you. That’s why Job said, “I made a 
covenant with my eyes not to look with lust upon a young woman.” 1 
And David prayed, “Keep me from paying attention to what is 
worthless.” 1 

Have you ever watched a food advertisement on television and 
suddenly felt you were hungry? Have you ever heard someone 
cough and immediately felt the need to clear your throat? Ever 
watched someone release a big yawn and felt the urge to yawn 
yourself? (You may be yawning right now as you read this!) That 
is the power of suggestion. We naturally move toward whatever 
we focus our attention on. The more you think about something, 
the stronger it takes hold of you. 


.--- 

The battle for sin is won or lost 
in your mind. Whatever gets 
your attention will get you. 

- 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


210 



That is why repeating “I must stop eating too much ... or stop 
smoking ... or stop lusting” is a self-defeating strategy. It keeps 
you focused on what you don’t want. It’s like announcing, “I’m 
never going to do what my mom did.” You are setting yourself up 
to repeat it. 

Most diets don’t work because they keep you thinking about 
food all the time, guaranteeing that you’ll be hungry. In the same 
way, a speaker who keeps repeating to herself, “Don’t be 
nervous!” sets herself up to be nervous! Instead she should focus 
on anything except her feelings—on God, on the importance of 
her speech, or on the needs of those listening. 

Temptation begins by capturing your attention. What gets 
your attention arouses your emotions. Then your emotions 
activate your behavior, and you act on what you felt. The more 
you focus on “I don’t want to do this,” the stronger it draws 
you into its web. 

Ignoring a temptation is far more effective than fighting it. 
Once your mind is on something else, the temptation loses its 
power. So when temptation calls you on the phone, don’t argue 
with it, just hang up! 

Sometimes this means physically leaving a tempting situation. 
This is one time it is okay to run away. Get up and turn 
off the television set. Walk away from a group that 
is gossiping. Leave the theater in the middle of 
the movie. To avoid being stung, stay away from 
the bees. Do whatever is necessary to turn your 
attention to something else. 

Spiritually, your mind is your most vulnerable 
organ. To reduce temptation, keep your mind 
occupied with God’s Word and other good 
thoughts. You defeat bad thoughts by thinking of 
something better. This is the principle of replacement. You 
overcome evil with good. 4 Satan can’t get your attention when 
your mind is preoccupied with something else. That’s why the 



PURPOSE #j: You Were Created to Become Like Christ 


211 


Bible repeatedly tells us to keep our minds focused: “Fix your 
thoughts on Jesus. ” 5 “Always think about Jesus Christ.” 6 

“Fill your minds with those things that are good and that deserve 
praise: things that are true, noble, right, pure, lovely, and 
honorable.” 7 

If you’re serious about defeating temptation you must manage 
your mind and monitor your media intake. The wisest man who 
ever lived warned, “Be careful how you think; your life is shaped by 
your thoughts. ” 8 Don’t allow trash into your mind indiscriminately. 
Be selective. Choose carefully what you think about. Follow Paul’s 
model: “We capture every thought and make it give up and obey 
Christ.” 9 This takes a lifetime of practice, but with the help of the 
Holy Spirit you can reprogram the way you think. 

Reveal your struggle to a godly friend or support group. 
You don’t have to broadcast it to the whole world, but you need 
at least one person you can honestly share your struggles with. 
The Bible says, “Ton are better off to have a friend than to be all 
alone.... If you fall, your friend can help you up. But if you fall 
without having a friend nearby, you are really in trouble.” 10 

Let me be clear: If you’re losing the battle against a persistent 
bad habit, an addiction, or a temptation, and you’re stuck in a 
repeating cycle of good intention-failure-guilt, you will not get 
better on your own! You need the help of other people. Some 

temptations are only overcome with the help of 
day twenty-seven: a partner who prays for you, encourages you, 

DEFEATING and holds you accountable. 

TEMPTATION God’s plan for your growth and freedom 

includes other Christians. Authentic, honest 
fellowship is the antidote to your lonely struggle against those 
sins that won’t budge. God says it is the only way you’re going to 
break free: “Confess your sins to each other and pray for each other so 
that you may be healed.” 11 

Do you really want to be healed of that persistent temptation 
that keeps defeating you over and over? God’s solution is plain: 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


212 


Don’t repress it; confess it! Don’t conceal it; reveal it. Revealing 
your feeling is the beginning of healing. 

Hiding your hurt only intensifies it. Problems grow in the 
dark and become bigger and bigger, but when exposed to the 
light of truth, they shrink. You are only as sick as your secrets. 

So take off your mask, stop pretending you’re perfect, and walk 
into freedom. 

At Saddleback Church we have seen the awesome power of this 
principle to break the grip of seemingly hopeless addictions and 
persistent temptations through a 
program we developed called 
Celebrate Recovery. It is a biblical, 
eight-step recovery process based 
on the Beatitudes of Jesus and built 
around small support groups. In 
the past ten years over 5,000 lives 
have been set free from all kinds of 
habits, hurts, and addictions. Today the program is used in 
thousands of churches. I highly recommend it for your church. 

Satan wants you to think that your sin and temptation are 
unique so you must keep them a secret. The truth is, we’re all in 
the same boat. We all fight the same temptations, 12 and “all of us 
have sinned.” 13 Millions have felt what you’re feeling and have 
faced the same struggles you’re facing right now. 

The reason we hide our faults is pride. We want others to think 
we have everything “under control.” The truth is, whatever you 
can’t talk about is already out of control in your life: problems 
with your finances, marriage, kids, thoughts, sexuality, secret 
habits, or anything else. If you could handle it on your own, you 
would have already done so. But you can’t. Willpower and 
personal resolutions aren’t enough. 

Some problems are too ingrained, too habitual, and too big to 
solve on your own. You need a small group or an accountability 
partner who will encourage you, support you, pray for you, love 


The truth is, whatever you can’t 
talk about is already out 
of control in your life. 

- - 


PURPOSE #j: You Were Created to Become Like Christ 


213 



you unconditionally, and hold you accountable. Then you can do 
the same for them. 

Whenever someone confides to me, “I’ve never told this to 
anyone until now,” I get excited for that person because I know 
they are about to experience great relief and liberation. The 
pressure valve is going to be released, and for the first time they 
are going to see a glimmer of hope for their future. It always 
happens when we do what God tells us to do by admitting our 
struggles to a godly friend. 

Let me ask you a tough question: What are you pretending 
isn’t a problem in your life? What are you afraid to talk about? 
You’re not going to solve it on your own. Yes, it is humbling to 
admit our weaknesses to others, but lack of humility is the very 
thing that is keeping you from getting better. The Bible says, 

“God sets himself against the proud, but he shows favor to the humble. 
So humble yourselves before God.” u 

Resist the Devil. After we have humbled ourselves and 
submitted to God, we are then told to defy the Devil. The rest of 
James 4:7 says, “Resist the Devil and he will flee from you. ” We 
don’t passively resign ourselves to his attacks. We are to fight back. 

The New Testament often describes the Christian life as a 
spiritual battle against evil forces, using war terms such as fight, 
conquer, strive, and overcome. Christians are often compared to 
soldiers serving in enemy territory. 

How can we resist the Devil? Paul tells us, “Put on salvation as 
your helmet, and take the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of 
God. ” 15 The first step is to accept God’s salvation. You won’t be 
able to say no to the Devil unless you’ve said yes to Christ. 
Without Christ we are defenseless against the Devil, but with “the 
helmet of salvation” our minds are protected by God. Remember 
this: If you are a believer, Satan cannot force you to do anything. 
He can only suggest. 

Second, you must use the Word of God as your weapon 
against Satan. Jesus modeled this when he was tempted in the 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


214 


wilderness. Every time Satan suggested a temptation, Jesus 
countered by quoting Scripture. He didn’t argue with Satan. He 
didn’t say, “I’m not hungry,” when tempted to use his power to 
meet a personal need. He simply quoted Scripture from memory. 
We must do the same. There is power in God’s Word, and Satan 
fears it. 

Don’t ever try to argue with the Devil. He’s better at arguing 
than you are, having had thousands of years to practice. You can’t 
bluff Satan with logic or your opinion, but you can use the 
weapon that makes him tremble—the truth of God. This is why 
memorizing Scripture is absolutely essential to defeating 
temptation. You have quick access to it whenever you’re tempted. 
Like Jesus, you have the truth stored in your heart, ready to be 
remembered. 

If you don’t have any Bible verses memorized, you’ve got 
no bullets in your gun! I challenge you to memorize one verse 


a week for the rest of your life. 
Imagine how much stronger 
you’ll be. 

Realize your vulnerability. God 

warns us never to get cocky and 
overconfident; that is the recipe for 
disaster. Jeremiah said, “The heart is 
deceitful above all things and beyond 
That means we are good at 


Don’t ever try to argue with the 
Devil. He’s better at arguing 
than you are, having had 
thousands of years to practice. 


cure. 


”\6 


- 


fooling ourselves. Given the right circumstances, any of us are 
capable of any sin. We must never let down our guard and think 
we’re beyond temptation. 

Don’t carelessly place yourself in tempting situations. Avoid 
them. 17 Remember that it is easier to stay out of temptation than 
to get out of it. The Bible says, “Don’t be so naive and self- 
confident. You’re not exempt. You could fall flat on your face as 
easily as anyone else. Forget about self-confidence; it’s useless. 
Cultivate God-confidence. ” 18 


PURPOSE # 3 : Vou Were Created to Become Like Christ 


215 



'■ 4 ^-—- 


Day Twenty-seven 

4 n 

Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: There is always a way out. 

Verse to Remember: “God is faithful. He will keep the 
temptation from becoming so strong that you can’t stand 
up against it. When you are tempted, he will show you a 
way out so that you will not give in to it.” 

1 Corinthians 10:13b (NLT) 

Question to Consider: Who could I ask to be a 
spiritual partner to help me defeat a persistent 
temptation by praying for me? 

__ _ _ _ _ _— -_ _ _ _ _ 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


216 









It Takes Time 


Everything on earth has its own time 
and its own season. 

Ecclesiastes 3:1 (CEV) 

I am sure that God who began the good work 
within you will keep right on helping you grow 
in his grace until his task within you is finally 
finished on that day when Jesus Christ returns. 
Philippians. 1:6 (LB) 


There are no shortcuts to maturity. 

It takes years for us to grow to adulthood, and it takes a hill 
season for fruit to mature and ripen. The same is true for the fruit 
of the Spirit. The development of Christlike character cannot be 
rushed. Spiritual growth, like physical growth, takes time. 

When you try to ripen fruit quickly, it loses its flavor. In 
America, tomatoes are usually picked unripened so they won’t 
bruise during shipping to the stores. Then, before they are sold, 
these green tomatoes are sprayed with C0 2 gas to turn them red 
instantly. Gassed tomatoes are edible, but they are no match to 
the flavor of a vine-ripened tomato that is allowed to mature 
slowly. 


PURPOSE #3: You Were Created to Become Like Christ 


217 


While we worry about how fast wc grow, God is concerned 
about how strong we grow. God views our lives from and for 
eternity, so he is never in a hurry. 

Lane Adams once compared the process of spiritual growth to 
the strategy the Allies used in World War II to liberate islands in 

the South Pacific. First they would 
“soften up” an island, weakening 
the resistance by shelling the 
enemy strongholds with bombs 
from offshore ships. Next, a small 
group of Marines would invade the 
island and establish a 
“beachhead”—a tiny fragment of 
the island that they could control. Once the beachhead was 
secured, they would begin the long process of liberating the rest 
of the island, one bit of territory at a time. Eventually the entire 
island would be brought under control, but not without some 
costly battles. 

Adams drew this parallel: Before Christ invades our lives at 
conversion, he sometimes has to “soften us up” by allowing 
problems we can’t handle. While some open their lives to Christ 
the first time he knocks on the door, most of us are resistant and 
defensive. Our pre-conversion experience is Jesus saying, “Behold 
I stand at the door and bomb!” 

The moment you open yourself to Christ, God gets a 
“beachhead” in your fife. You may think you have surrendered all 
your life to him, but the truth is, there is a lot to your life that 
you aren’t even aware of. You can only give God as much of you 
as you understand at that moment. That’s okay. Once Christ is 
given a beachhead, he begins the campaign to take over more and 
more territory until all of your life is completely his. There will be 
struggles and battles, but the outcome will never be in doubt. 

God has promised that “he who began a good work in yon will carry 
it on to completion 


_ - 

While we worry about how 
fast we grow, God is concerned 
about how strong we grow. 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


218 



Discipleship is the process of conforming to Christ. The Bible 
says, “We arrive at real maturity—that measure of development 
which is meant by ‘the fullness of Christ.’” 2 Christlikeness is your 
eventual destination, but your journey will last a lifetime. 

So far we have seen that this journey involves believing 
(through worship), belonging {through fellowship), and 
becoming (through discipleship). Every day God wants you to 
become a little more like him: “Ton have begun to live the new 
life, in which you are being made new and are becoming like the 
One who made you.” 2 

Today we’re obsessed with speed, but God is more interested 
in strength and stability than swiftness. We want the quick fix, the 
shortcut, the on-the-spot solution. We want a sermon, a seminar, 
or an experience that will instantly resolve all problems, remove 
all temptation, and release us from all growing pains. But real 
maturity is never the result of a single experience, no matter how 
powerful or moving. Growth is gradual. The Bible says, “Our lives 
gradually becoming brighter and more beautiful as God enters our 
lives and we become like him.” A 

Why Does It Take So Long? 

Although God could instantiy transform us, he has chosen to 
develop us slowly. Jesus is deliberate in developing his disciples. 
Just as God allowed the Israelites to take over the Promised Land 
“little by little” 5 so they wouldn’t be overwhelmed, he 
prefers to work in incremental steps in our lives. 

Why does it take so long to change and grow 
up? There are several reasons. 

We are slow learners. We often have to 
relearn a lesson forty or fifty times to really get 
it. The problems keep recurring, and we think, 

“Not again! I’ve already learned that!”—but 
God knows better. The history of Israel illustrates 
how quickly we forget the lessons God teaches us and 



PURPOSE #3: You Were Created to Become Like Christ 


219 



how soon we revert to our old patterns of behavior. We need 
repeated exposure. 

We have a lot to unlearn. Many people go to a counselor with 
a personal or relational problem that took years to develop and 
say, “I need you to fix me. I’ve got an hour.” They naively expect 
a quick solution to a long-standing, deep-rooted difficulty. Since 
most of our problems—and all of our bad habits—didn’t develop 
overnight, it’s unrealistic to expect them to go away immediately. 
There is no pill, prayer, or principle that will instantly undo the 
damage of many years. It requires the hard work of removal and 
replacement. The Bible calls it “taking off the old self” and 
“putting on the new self” 6 While you were given a brand new 
nature at the moment of conversion, you still have old habits, 
patterns, and practices that need to be removed and replaced. 

We are afraid to humbly face the truth about ourselves. I 
have already pointed out that the truth will set us free but it often 
makes us miserable first. The fear of what we might discover if we 
honestly faced our character defects keeps us living in the prison 
of denial. Only as God is allowed to shine the light of his truth on 

our faults, failures, and hang-ups 
can we begin to work on them. 

This is why you cannot grow 
without a humble, teachable 
attitude. 

Growth is often painful and 
scary. There is no growth without 
change; there is no change without 
fear or loss; and there is no loss without pain. Every change 
involves a loss of some land: You must let go of old ways in order 
to experience the new. We fear these losses, even if our old ways 
were self-defeating, because, like a worn out pair of shoes, they 
were at least comfortable and familiar. 

People often build their identity around their defects. We say, 
“It’s just like me to be . .and “It’s just the way I am.” The 


.--- 

There is no growth without 
change, no change without fear 
or loss, and no loss without pain. 


The Purpose'Driven Life 


220 



unconscious worry is that if I let go of my habit, my hurt, or my 
hang-up, who will I be? This fear can definitely slow down your 
growth. 

Habits take t im e to develop. Remember that your character is 
the sum total of your habits. You can’t claim to be kind unless 
you are habitually kind—you show kindness without even 
thinking about it. You can’t claim to have integrity unless it is 
your habit to always be honest. A husband who is faithful to his 
wife most of the time is not faithful at all! Your 

habits define your character. day twenty-eight: 

There is only one way to develop the habits of IT TAKES 

Christlike character: You must practice them— TIME 

and that takes time! There are no instant habits. 

Paul urged Timothy, “Practice these things. Devote your life to them 
so that everyone can see your progress.” 7 

If you practice something over time, you get good at it. 

Repetition is the mother of character and skill. These character¬ 
building habits are often called “spiritual disciplines,” and there 
are dozens of great books that can teach you how to do these. See 
appendix 2 for a recommended reading list of books for spiritual 
growth. 

Don’t Get in a Hurry 

As you grow to spiritual maturity, there are several ways to 
cooperate with God in the process. 

Believe God is working in your life even when you don’t 
feel it. Spiritual growth is sometimes tedious work, one small step 
at a time. Expect gradual improvement. The Bible says, 

“Everything on earth has its own time and its own season,” 8 There 
are seasons in your spiritual life, too. Sometimes you will have a 
short, intense burst of growth (springtime) followed by a period 
of stabilizing and testing (fall and winter). 

What about those problems, habits, and hurts you would like 
miraculously removed? It’s fine to pray for a miracle, but don’t be 


PURPOSE #j: You Were Created to Become Like Christ 


221 


disappointed if the answer comes through a gradual change. Over 
time, a slow, steady stream of water will erode the hardest rock 
and turn giant boulders into pebbles. Over time, a little sprout 
can turn into a giant redwood tree towering 350 feet tall. 

Keep a notebook or journal of lessons learned. This is not a 
diary of events, but a record of what you are learning. Write down 
the insights and life lessons God teaches you about him, about 
yourself, about life, relationships, and everything else. Record 
these so you can review and remember them and pass them on to 
the next generation. 9 The reason we must relearn lessons is that 
we forget them. Reviewing your spiritual journal regularly can 
spare you a lot of unnecessary pain and heartache. The Bible says, 
“It’s crucial that we keep a firm grip on what we’ve heard so that we 
don’t drift off” 10 

Be patient with God and with yourself. One of life’s 
frustrations is that God’s timetable is rarely the same as ours. We 
are often in a hurry when God isn’t. You may feel frustrated with 
the seemingly slow progress you’re making in life. Remember that 
God is never in a hurry, but he is always on time. He will use your 
entire lifetime to prepare you for your role in eternity. 

The Bible is filled with examples of how God uses a long 
process to develop character, especially in leaders. He took eighty 
years to prepare Moses, including forty in the wilderness. For 

14,600 days Moses kept waiting 
and wondering, “Is it time yet?” 

But God kept saying, “Not yet.” 

Contrary to popular book titles, 
there are no Easy Steps to Maturity 
or Secrets of Instant Sainthood. 

When God wants to make a 
mushroom, he does it overnight, but when he wants to make a 
giant oak, he takes a hundred years. Great souls are grown 
through struggles and storms and seasons of suffering. Be patient 
with the process. James advised, “Don’t try to get out of anything 


--- 

God is never in a hurry, 
hut he is always on time. 

— - 


The Purpose'Driven Life 


222 



prematurely. Let it do its work so you become mature and well- 
developed.” 11 

Don’t get discouraged. When Habaklcuk became depressed 
because he didn’t think God was acting quickly enough, God had 
this to say: “These things I plan won’t happen right away. Slowly, 
steadily, surely, the time approaches when the vision will be fulfilled. 
If it seems slow, do not despair, for these things will surely come to 
pass. Just be patient! They will not be overdue a single day!” 12 A 
delay is not a denial from God. 

Remember how far you’ve come, not just how far you have to 
go. You are not where you want to be, but neither are you where 
you used to be. Years ago people wore a popular button with the 
letters PBPGINFWMY. It stood for “Please Be Patient, God Is 
Not Finished With Me Yet.” God isn’t finished with you, either, 
so keep on moving forward. Even the snail reached the ark by 
persevering! 




Day Twenty-eight 
Thinking about My Purpose 


Point to Ponder: There are no shortcuts to maturity. 


Verse to Remember: “God began doing a good work in 
you, and I am sure he will continue it until it is finished 
when Jesus Christ comes again.” Philippians 1:6 (NCV) 


' 

i 

I 

I 

i 

I 


f 

I 


Question to Consider: In what area of my spiritual 
growth do I need to be more patient and persistent? 


i 




PURPOSE # 3 : Uou Were Created to Become Like Christ 


223 









PURPOSE #4 



YOU WERE SHAPED 
FOR SERVING GOD 

We are simply God’s servants.... Each one of 
us does the work which the Lord gave him to do: 

I planted the seed, Apollos watered the plant, 
but it was God who made the plant grow. 
i Corinthians 3:5 — 6 (TEV) 



Accepting Your Assignment 


It is God himself who has made us what 
we are and given us new lives 
from Christ Jesus ; and long ages ago 
he planned that we should spend 
these lives in helping others. 

Ephesians 2:io (LB) 


I glorified you on earth by completing down 
to the last detail what you assigned me to do. 
John 17:4 (Msg) 


You were put on earth to make a contribution. 

You weren’t created just to consume resources—to eat, breathe, 
and take up space. God designed you to make a difference with 
your life. While many best-selling books offer advice on how to 
“get 33 the most out of life, that’s not the reason God made you. 
You were created to add to life on earth, not just take from it. 
God wants you to give something back. This is God’s fourth 
purpose for your life, and it is called your “ministry,” or service. 
The Bible gives us the details. 

You were created to serve God. The Bible says, “[God] has 
created us for a life of good deeds, which he has already prepared for 


PURPOSE #4: You Were Shaped for Serving God 


227 


us to do .” 1 These “good deeds” are your service. Whenever you 
serve others in any way, you are actually serving God 2 and 
fulfilling one of your purposes. In the next two chapters you will 
see how God has carefully shaped you for this purpose. What God 
told Jeremiah is also true for you: “Before I made you in your 
mother’s womb, I chose you. Before you were born, I set you apart for 
a special work .” 3 You were placed on this planet for a special 
assignment. 

You were saved to serve God. The Bible says, “It is he who 
saved us and chose us for his holy work, not because we deserved it 
but because that was his plan. ” 4 God redeemed you so you could 
do his “holy work.” You’re not saved by service, but you are 
saved for service. In God’s kingdom, you have a place, a purpose, 
a role, and a function to fulfill. This gives your life great 
significance and value. 

It cost Jesus his own life to purchase your salvation. The Bible 
reminds us, “God paid a gnat price for you. So use your body to 
honor God .” 3 We don’t serve God out of guilt or fear or even 
duty, but out of joy, and deep gratitude for what he’s done for us. 
We owe him our lives. Through salvation our past has been 
forgiven, our present is given meaning, and our future is secured. 
In light of these incredible benefits Paul concluded, “Because of 
God’s great mercy ... Offer yourselves as a living 
day twenty-nine: sacrifice to God, dedicated to his service .” 6 

ACCEPTING The aposde John taught that our loving 

YOUR service to others shows that we are truly saved. 

ASSIGNMENT He said, “Our love for each other proves that we 
have gone from death to life .” 7 If I have no love 
for others, no desire to serve others, and I’m only concerned 
about my needs, I should question whether Christ is really in my 
life. A saved heart is one that wants to serve. 

Another term for serving God that’s misunderstood by most 
people is the word ministry. When most people hear “ministry,” 
they think of pastors, priests, and professional clergy, but God says 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


228 


every member of his family is a minister. In the Bible, the words 
servant and minister are synonyms, as are service and ministry. If 
yon are a Christian, you are a minister, and when you’re serving, 
you’re ministering. 

When Peter’s sick mother-in-law was healed by Jesus, she 
instantly “stood up and began to serve Jesus, ” 8 using her new gift of 
health. This is what we’re to do. We are healed to help others. We 


are blessed to be a blessing. We are 
saved to serve, not to sit around 
and wait for heaven. 

Have you ever wondered why 
God doesn’t just immediately take 
us to heaven the moment we accept 
his grace? Why does he leave us in a 
fallen world? He leaves us here to 
fulfill his purposes. Once you are 


— - -- . 

if I have no love for others, 
no desire to serve others, 

I should question whether 
Christ is really in my life. 




saved, God intends to use you for his goals. God has a ministry 
for you in his church and a mission for you in the world. 

You are called to serve God. Growing up, you may have 
thought that being “called” by God was something only 
missionaries, pastors, nuns, and other “full-time” church workers 
experienced, but the Bible says every Christian is called to 
service . 9 Your call to salvation included your call to service. They 
are the same. Regardless of your job or career, you are called to 
full-time Christian service. A “non-serving Christian” is a 
contradiction in terms. 

The Bible says, “He saved us and called us to be his own people, 
not because of what we have done, but because of his own purpose A 10 
Peter adds, “You were chosen to tell about the excellent qualities of 
God, who called you.” 11 Anytime you use your God-given abilities 
to help others, you are fulfilling your calling. 

The Bible says, “Now you belong to him ... in order that we 
might be useful in the service of God.” 12 How much of the time are 
you being useful in the service of God? In some churches in 


PURPOSE #4: You Were Shaped for Serving God 


229 



China, they welcome new believers by saying “Jesus now has a 
new pair of eyes to see with, new ears to listen with, new hands to 
help with, and a new heart to love others with.” 

One reason why you need to be connected to a church family is 
to fulfill your calling to serve other believers in practical ways. The 
Bible says, “All of you together are Christ’s body, and each one of you 
is a separate and necessary part of it.” 12 Your service is desperately 
needed in the Body of Christ—just ask any local church. Each of 
us has a role to play, and every role is important. There is no small 
service to God; it all matters. 

Likewise, there are no insignificant ministries in the church. 
Some are visible and some are behind the scenes, but all are 
valuable. Small or hidden ministries often make the biggest 
difference. In my home, the most important light is not the large 
chandelier in our dining room but the little night light that keeps 
me from stubbing my toe when I get up at night. There is no 
correlation between size and significance. Every ministry 

matters because we are all dependent on each other to 
function. 

What happens when one part of your body fails to 
function? You get sick. The rest of your body suffers. 
Imagine if your liver decided to start living for itself: 

“I’m tired! I don’t want to serve the body anymore! I want 
a year off just to be fed. I’ve got to do what’s best for me! Let 
some other part take over.” What would happen? Your body 
would die. Today thousands of local churches are dying because 
of Christians who are unwilling to serve. They sit on the sidelines 
as spectators, and the Body suffers. 

You are commanded to serve God. Jesus was 
unmistakable: “Tour attitude must be like my own, for I, the 
Messiah, did not come to be served, but to serve and to give my 
life.” 14 For Christians, service is not optional, something to be 
tacked onto our schedules if we can spare the time. It is the 
heart of the Christian life. Jesus came “to serve” and “to 



The Purpose-Driven Life 


230 


give” — and those two verbs should define your life on earth, 
too. Serving and giving sum up God’s fourth purpose for your 
life. Mother Teresa once said, “Holy living consists in doing 
God’s work with a smile.” 

Jesus taught that spiritual maturity is never an end in itself. 
Maturity is for ministry! We grow up in order to give out. It is not 
enough to keep learning more and 
more. We must act on what we 
know and practice what we claim to 
believe. Impression without 
expression causes depression. Study 
without service leads to spiritual 
stagnation. The old comparison 
between the Sea of Galilee and the 


Spiritual maturity is never 
an end in itself We grow up 
in order to give out. 




Dead Sea is still true. Galilee is a lake full of life because it takes in 
water but also gives it out. In contrast, nothing lives in the Dead 
Sea because, with no outflow, the lake has stagnated. 

The last thing many believers need today is to go to another 
Bible study. They already know far more than they are putting 
into practice. What they need are serving experiences in which 
they can exercise their spiritual muscles. 

Serving is the opposite of our natural inclination. Most of the 
time we’re more interested in “serve us” than service. We say, “I’m 
looking for a church that meets my needs and blesses me,” not 
“I’m looking for a place to serve and be a blessing.” We expect 
others to serve us, not vice versa. But as we mature in Christ, the 
focus of our lives should increasingly shift to living a life of 
service. The mature follower of Jesus stops asking, “Who’s going 
to meet my needs?” and starts asking, “Whose needs can I meet?” 
Do you ever ask that question? 


Preparing for Eternity 

At the end of your life on earth you will stand before God, and 
he is going to evaluate how well you served others with your life. 


PURPOSE #4: You Were Shaped for Serving God 


231 



The Bible says, “Each of us will have to give a personal account to 
God. ” 1 s Think about the implications of that. One day God will 
compare how much time and energy we spent on ourselves 
compared with what we invested in serving others. 

At that point, all our excuses for self-centeredness will sound 
hollow: “I was too busy” or “I had my own goals” or “I was 
preoccupied with working, having fun, or preparing for 
retirement.” To all excuses God will respond, “Sorry, wrong 
answer. I created, saved, and called you and commanded you to 
live a life of service. What part did you not understand?” The 
Bible warns unbelievers, “He will pour out his anger and wrath on 
those who live for themselves,” 19 but for Christians it will mean a 
loss of eternal rewards. 

We are only fully alive when we’re helping others. Jesus said, “If 
you insist on saving your life, you will lose it. Only those who throw 
away their lives for my sake and for the sake of the Good News will 
ever know what it means to really live.” 17 This truth is so important 
that it is repeated five times in the Gospels. If you aren’t serving, 
you’re just existing, because life is meant for ministry. God wants 
you to learn to love and serve others unselfishly. 


Service and Significance 

You are going to give your life for something. What will it be— 
a career, a sport, a hobby, fame, wealth? None of these will have 
lasting significance. Service is the pathway to real significance. It is 

through ministry that we discover 
the meaning of our lives. The Bible 
says, “Each of us finds our meaning 
and function as a part of his body.” 18 
As we serve together in God’s 
family, our lives take on eternal 
importance. Paul said, “I want you 


- -- 

Service is the pathway 
to real significance. 

- - 


to think about how all this makes you more significant, not less... 
because of what you are a part of.” 19 


The Purpose'Driven Life 


232 



God wants to use you to make a difference in his world. He 
wants to work through you. What matters is not the duration of 
your life, but the donation of it. Not how longbow lived, but how 
you lived. 

If you’re not involved in any service or ministry, what excuse 
have you been using? Abraham was old, Jacob was insecure, Leah 
was unattractive, Joseph was abused, Moses stuttered, Gideon was 
poor, Samson was codependent, Rahab was immoral, David had 
an affair and all kinds of family problems, Elijah was suicidal, 
Jeremiah was depressed, Jonah was reluctant, Naomi was a 
widow, John the Baptist was eccentric to say the least, Peter was 
impulsive and hot-tempered, Martha worried a lot, the Samaritan 
woman had several failed marriages, Zacchaeus was unpopular, 
Thomas had doubts, Paul had poor health, and Timothy was 
timid. That is quite a variety of misfits, but God used each of 
them in his service. He will use you, too, if you stop making 
excuses. 




Day Twenty-nine 
Thinking about My Purpose 


Point to Ponder: Service is not optional. 


Verse to Remember: “For we are God’s workmanship, 
created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God 
prepared in advance for us to do.” Ephesians 2:10 (NIV) 




j 

I 


! 


Question to Consider: What is holding me back from 
accepting God’s call to serve him? 

____. 


PURPOSE #4: You Were Shaped for Serving God 


233 








Shaped for Serving God 

Tour hands shaped me and made me. 

Job 10:8 (NIV) 

The people I have shaped for myself 
will broadcast my praises. 

Isaiah 43:21 (NJB) 


You were shaped to serve God. 

God formed every creature on this planet with a special area of 
expertise. Some animals run, some hop, some swim, some 
burrow, and some fly. Each has a particular role to play, based on 
the way they were shaped by God. The same is true with humans. 
Each of us was uniquely designed, or “shaped, ” to do certain 
things. 

Before architects design any new building they first ask, “What 
will be its purpose? EIow will it be used?” The intended function 
always determines the form of the building. Before God created 
you, he decided what role he wanted you to play on earth. He 
planned exactly how he wanted you to serve him, and then he 
shaped you for those tasks. You are the way you are because you 
were made for a specific ministry. 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


234 


God never wastes anything. 

— - 


The Bible says, “We are God’s workmanship, created in Christ 
Jesus to do good works.” 1 Our English word poem comes from the 
Greek word translated “workmanship.” You are God’s 
handcrafted work of art. You are not an assembly-line product, 
mass produced without thought. You are a custom-designed, 
one-of-a-kind, original masterpiece. 

God deliberately shaped and 
formed you to serve him in a way 
that makes your ministry unique. 

He carefully mixed the DNA 
cocktail that created you. David 
praised God for this incredible personal attention to detail: “Ton 
made all the delicate, inner parts of my body and knit me together 
in my mother’s womb. Thank you for making me so wonderfully 
complex! Tour workmanship is marvelous.” 2 As Ethel Waters said, 
“God doesn’t make junk.” 

Not only did God shape you before your birth, he planned 
every day of your life to support his shaping process. David 
continues, “Every day of my life was recorded in your book. Every 
moment was laid out before a single day had passed. ” 3 This means 
that nothing that happens in your life is insignificant. God uses all 
of it to mold you for your ministry to others and shape you for 
your service to him. 

God never wastes anything. He would not give you abilities, 
interests, talents, gifts, personality, and life experiences unless 
he intended to use them for his glory. By identifying and 
understanding these factors you can discover God’s will for 
your life. 

The Bible says you are “wonderfully complex.” You are a 
combination of many different factors. To help you remember 
five of these factors, I have created a simple acrostic: SHAPE. 

In this chapter and the next we will look at these five factors, 
and following that, I will explain how to discover and use your 
shape. 


PURPOSE #4; You Were Shaped for Serving God 


235 



How God Shapes You for Your Ministry 

Whenever God gives us an assignment, he always equips us 
with what we need to accomplish it. This custom combination of 
capabilities is called your SHAPE: 

Spiritual gifts 

Heart 

Abilities 

Personality 

Experience 

SHAPE: Unwrapping Your Spiritual Gifts 

God gives every believer spiritual gifts to be used in ministry. 4 
These are special God-empowered abilities for serving him that 
are given only to believers. The Bible says, “Whoever does not have 
the Spirit cannot receive the gifts that come from God’s Spirit.” 5 

You can’t earn your spiritual gifts or deserve them—that’s why 
they are called gifts! They are an expression of God’s grace to you. 
“Christ has generously divided out his gifts to us. ” b Neither do you 
get to choose which gifts you’d like to have; God determines that. 
Paul explained, “It is the one and only Holy Spirit who distributes 
these gifts. He alone decides which gift each person should have.” 7 

Because God loves variety and he wants us to be special, no 
single gift is given to everyone. 8 Also, no individual receives all 
the gifts. If you had them all, you’d have no need of 
anyone else, and that would defeat one of God’s 
purposes—to teach us to love and depend on each 
other. 

Your spiritual gifts were not given for your own 
benefit but for the benefit of others , just as other 
people were given gifts for your benefit. The Bible 
says, “A spiritual gift is given to each of us as a means of helping the 
entire church.” 9 God planned it this way so we would need each 


DAY THIRTY: 

SHAPED 

FOR 

SERVING 

GOD 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


236 


other. When we use our gifts together, we all benefit. If others 
don’t use their gifts, you get cheated, and if you don’t use your 
gifts, they get cheated. This is why we’re commanded to discover 
and develop our spiritual gifts. Have you taken the time to 
discover your spiritual gifts? An unopened gift is worthless. 

Whenever we forget these basic truths about gifts, it always 
causes trouble in the church. Two common problems are “gift- 
envy” and “gift-projection.” The first occurs when we compare our 
gifts with others’, feel dissatisfied 
with what God gave us, and 
become resentful or jealous of how 
God uses others. The second 
problem happens when we expect 
everyone else to have our gifts, do 
what we are called to do, and feel as 


- 

An unopened gift 
is worthless. 




passionate about it as we do. The Bible says, “There are different 
kinds of service in the church, but it is the same Lord we are 
serving.” 10 

Sometimes spiritual gifts are overemphasized to the neglect of 
the other factors God uses to shape you for service. Your gifts 
reveal one key to discovering God’s will for your ministry, but your 
spiritual gifts are not the total picture. God has shaped you in four 
other ways, too. 


SHAPE: Listening to Your Heart 

The Bible uses the term heart to describe the bundle of desires, 
hopes, interests, ambitions, dreams, and affections you have. Your 
heart represents the source of all your motivations—what you 
love to do and what you care about most. Even today we still use 
the word in this way when we say, “I love you with all my heart.” 

The Bible says, “As a face is reflected in water, so the heart 
reflects the person.” 11 Your heart reveals the real you—what you 
truly are, not what others think you are or what circumstances 
force you to be. Your heart determines why you say the things 


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you do, why you feel the way you do, and why you act the way 
you do. 12 

Physically, each of us has a unique heartbeat. Just as we each 
have unique thumbprints, eye prints, and voice prints, our hearts 
beat in slightly different patterns. It’s amazing that out of all the 
billions of people who have ever lived, no one has had a heartbeat 
exactly like yours. 

In the same way, God has given each of us a unique emotional 
“heartbeat” that races when we think about the subjects, 
activities, or circumstances that interest us. We instinctively care 
about some things and not about others. These are clues to where 
you should be serving. 

Another word for heart is passion. There are certain subjects 
you feel passionate about and others you couldn’t care less about. 
Some experiences turn you on and capture your attention while 
others turn you off or bore you to tears. These reveal the nature 
of your heart. 

When you were growing up, you may have discovered that you 
were intensely interested in some subjects that no one else in your 
family cared about. Where did those interests come from? They 
came from God. God had a purpose in giving you these 
_ inborn interests. Your emotional heartbeat is the 

second key to understanding your shape for service. 
M^*r** J Don’t ignore your interests. Consider how they 

RBru/zA 

might be used for God’s glory. There is a reason that 
you love to do these things. 

Repeatedly the Bible says to “serve the Lord with all your 
heart.” 1 * God wants you to serve him passionately, not dutifully. 
People rarely excel at tasks they don’t enjoy doing or feel 
passionate about. God wants you to use your natural interests to 
serve him and others. Listening for inner promptings can point to 
the ministry God intends for you to have. 

How do you know when you are serving God from your heart? 
The first telltale sign is enthusiasm. When you are doing what you 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


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love to do, no one has to motivate you or challenge you or check 
up on you. You do it for the sheer enjoyment. You don’t need 
rewards or applause or payment, because you love serving in this 
way. The opposite is also true: When you don’t have a heart for 
what you’re doing, you are easily discouraged. 

The second characteristic of serving God from your heart is 
effectiveness. Whenever you do what God wired you to love to do, 
you get good at it. Passion drives perfection. If you don’t care 
about a task, it is unlikely that you 
will excel at it. In contrast, the 
highest achievers in any field are 
those who do it because of passion, 
not duty or profit. 

We have all heard people say, “I 
took a job I hate in order to make a 
lot of money, so someday I can quit 
and do what I love to do.” That’s a big mistake. Don’t waste your 
life in a job that doesn’t express your heart. Remember, the 
greatest things in life are not things. Meaning is far more 
important than money. The richest man in the world once said, 

“A simple life in the fear-of-God is better than a rich life with a ton 
of headaches. 

Don’t settle for just achieving “the good life,” because the 
good life is not good enough. Ultimately it doesn’t satisfy. You 
can have a lot to live on and still have nothing to live for. Aim 
instead for “the better life —serving God in a way that expresses 
your heart. Figure out what you love to do—what God gave you 
a heart to do—and then do it for his glory. 


When you are doing what 
you love to do, no one 
has to motivate you. 

— - 


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Day Thirty 

Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: I was shaped for serving God. 


Verse to Remember: “God works through different men 
in different ways, but it is the same God who achieves his 
purposes through them all. ” 

1 Corinthians 12:6 (Ph) 

Question to Consider: In what way can I see myself 
passionately serving others and loving it? 


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Understanding Your Shape 


You shaped me first inside, then out; 
you formed me in my mother’s womb. 
Psalm 139:13 (Msg) 


Only you can be you. 

God designed each of us so there would be no duplication in 
the world. No one has the exact same mix of factors that make 
you unique. That means no one else on earth will ever be able to 
play the role God planned for you. If you don’t make your unique 
contribution to the Body of Christ, it won’t be made. The Bible 
says, a There are different kinds of spiritual gifts... different ways of 
serving ... [and] different abilities to perform service.” 1 In the last 
chapter we looked at the first two of these: your spiritual gifts and 
your heart. Now we will look at the rest of your SHAPE for 
serving God. 

SHAPE: Applying Your Abilities 

Your abilities are the natural talents you were born with. Some 
people have a natural ability with words: They came out of the 


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241 


womb talking! Other people have natural athletic abilities, 
excelling in physical coordination. Still others are good at 
mathematics or music or mechanics. 

When God wanted to create the Tabernacle and all the utensils 
for worship, he provided artists and craftsmen who were shaped 
with the “skill, ability, and knowledge in all kinds of crafts to make 
artistic designs ... and to engage in all kinds of craftsmanship.” 2 
Today God still bestows these abilities and thousands of others, so 
people can serve him. 

All of our abilities come from God. Even abilities used to sin 
are God-given; they are just being misused or abused. The Bible 
says, “God has given each of us the ability to do certain things 
well,” 3 Since your natural abilities are from God, they are just as 
important and as “spiritual” as your spiritual gifts. The only 
difference is that you were given them at birth. 

One of the most common excuses people give for not serving is 
“I just don’t have any abilities to offer.” This is ludicrous. You 
have dozens, probably hundreds, of untapped, unrecognized, and 
unused abilities that are lying dormant inside you. Many studies 
have revealed that the average person possesses from 500 to 700 
different skills and abilities—far more than you realize. 

For instance, your brain can store 100 trillion facts. Your mind 
can handle 15,000 decisions a second, as is the case when your 
digestive system is working. Your nose can smell up to 10,000 
different odors. Your touch can detect an item 1/25,000th of an 
inch thick, and your tongue can taste one part of quinine in 2 
million parts of water. You are a bundle of incredible abilities, an 
amazing creation of God. Part of the church’s responsibility is to 
identify and release your abilities for serving God. 

Every ability can be used for God’s glory. Paul said, 
“Whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God.” 4 The Bible is filled 
with examples of different abilities that God uses for his glory. 
Here are just a few of those mentioned in Scripture: artistic 
ability, architectural ability, administering, baking, boat making, 


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candy making, debating, designing, embalming, embroidering, 
engraving, farming, fishing, gardening, leading, managing, 
masonry, making music, making weapons, needle work, painting, 
planting, philosophizing, machinability, inventing, carpentry, 
sailing, selling, being a soldier, tailoring, teaching, writing 
literature and poetry. The Bible says, “There are different abilities 
to perform service, but the same God gives ability to all for their 
particular service. ” 7 God has a place in his church where your 
specialties can shine and you can make a difference. It’s up to you 
to find that place. 

God gives some people the ability to make a lot of money. 
Moses told the Israelites, “Remember the Lord your God, for it is he 
who gives you the ability to produce wealth. ” b People with this 
ability are good at building a business, making deals or sales, and 
reaping a profit. If you have this business ability, you should be 
using it for God’s glory. How? First, realize your ability came 
from God and give him the credit. Second, use your business to 
serve a need of others and to share your faith with unbelievers. 
Third, return at least a tithe (10 percent) of the profit to God as 
an act of worship. 7 Finally, make your goal to be a Kingdom 
Builder rather than just a Wealth Builder. I will explain this in 
chapter 34. 

What I’m able to do, God wants me to do. You are the only 
person on earth who can use your abilities. No one else can play 
your role, because they don’t have the unique shape that God has 
given you. The Bible says that God 
equips you “with all you need for 
doing his will T 8 To discover God’s 
will for your life, you should 
seriously examine what you are 
good at doing and what you’re not 
good at. 


What I’m able to do, 
God wants me to do. 


— ■ 


If God hasn’t given you the ability to carry a tune, he isn’t 
going to expect you to be an opera singer. God will never ask you 


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243 



to dedicate your life to a task you have no talent for. On the other 
hand, the abilities you do have are a strong indication of what 
God wants you to do with your life. They are dues to knowing 
God’s will for you. If you’re good at designing or recruiting or 
drawing or organizing, it is a safe assumption that God’s plan for 
your life includes that skill somehow. God doesn’t waste abilities; 
he matches our calling and our capabilities. 

Your abilities were not given just to 
make a living; God gave them to you for 
your ministry. Peter said, “God has given 
each of you some special abilities; be sure to 
use them to help each other, passing on to 
others God’s many kinds of blessings 9 

At this writing, nearly 7,000 people are using their abilities in 
ministry at Saddleback Church, providing every kind of service 
you could imagine: repairing donated cars to be given to the 
needy; finding the best deal for church purchases; landscaping; 
organizing files; designing art, programs, and buildings; providing 
health care; preparing meals; composing songs; teaching music; 
writing grant proposals; coaching teams; doing research for 
sermons or translating them; and hundreds of other specialized 
tasks. New members are told, “Whatever you’re good at, you 
should be doing for your church!” 

SHAPE: Using Your Personality 

We don’t realize how truly unique each of us is. DNA 
molecules can unite in an infinite number of ways. The number is 
10 to the 2,400,000,000th power. That number is the likelihood 
that you’d ever find somebody just like you. If you were to write 
out that number with each zero being one inch wide, you’d need 
a strip of paper 37,000 miles long! 

To put this in perspective, some scientists have guessed that all 
the particles in the universe are probably less than 10 with 76 
zeros behind it, far less than the possibilities of your DNA. Your 


DAY THIRTY-ONE: 

UNDERSTANDING 
YOUR SHAPE 


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244 


uniqueness is a scientific fact of life. When God made you, he 
broke the mold. There never has been, and never will be, anybody 
exactly like you. 

It is obvious that God loves variety—just look around! He 
created each of us with a unique combination of personality 
traits. God made introverts and extroverts. He made people who 
love routine and those who love variety. He made some people 
“thinkers” and others ‘feelers. ” Some people work best when 
given an individual assignment while others work better with a 
team. The Bible says, “God works through different people in 
different ways, but it is the same God who achieves his purpose 
through them all.” 10 

The Bible gives us plenty of proof that God uses all types of 
personalities. Peter was a sanguine. Paul was a choleric. Jeremiah 
was a melancholy. When you look at the personality differences in 
the twelve disciples, it’s easy to see why they sometimes had 
interpersonal conflict. 

There is no “right” or “wrong” temperament for ministry. We 
need all kinds of personalities to balance the church and give 
it flavor. The world would be a very boring place if we 
were all plain vanilla. Fortunately, people come in rf - ’' "dSra 

more than thirty-one flavors. ''■■pPEj 

Your personality will affect how and where you use 
your spiritual gifts and abilities. For instance, two people may 
have the same gift of evangelism, but if one is introverted and the 
other is extroverted, that gift will be expressed in different ways. 

Woodworkers know that it’s easier to work with the grain 
rather than against it. In the same way, when you are forced to 
minister in a manner that is “out of character” for your 
temperament, it creates tension and discomfort, requires extra 
effort and energy, and produces less than the best results. This is 
why mimicking someone else’s ministry never works. You don’t 
have their personality. Besides, God made you to be you! You can 
learn from the examples of others, but you must filter what you 


PURPOSE #4; You Were Shaped for Serving God 


245 


learn through your own shape. Today there are many books and 
tools that can help you understand your personality so you can 
determine how to use it for God. 

Like stained glass, our different personalities reflect God’s light 
in many colors and patterns. This blesses the family of God with 

depth and variety. It also blesses us 
personally. It feels good to do what 
God made you to do. When you 
minister in a manner consistent 
with the personality God gave you, 
you experience fulfillment, 
satisfaction, and fruitfulness. 

SHAPE: Employing Your Experiences 

You have been shaped by your experiences in life, most of 
which were beyond your control. God allowed them for his 
purpose of molding you. 11 In determining your shape for serving 
God, you should examine at least six lands of experiences from 
your past: 

• Family experiences: What did you learn growing up in your 
family? 

• Educational experiences: What were your favorite subjects in 
school? 

• Vocational experiences: What jobs have you been most 
effective in and enjoyed most? 

• Spiritual experiences: What have been your most meaningful 
times with God? 

• Ministry experiences: How have you served God in the past? 

• Painful experiences: What problems, hurts, thorns, and trials 
have you learned from? 

It is this last category, painful experiences, that God uses the 
most to prepare you for ministry. God never wastes a hurt! In fact, 
your greatest ministry will most likely come out of your greatest 


- - 

It feels good to do what 
God made you to do. 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


246 



hurt. Who could better minister to the parents of a Down 
syndrome child than another couple who have a child afflicted in 
the same way? Who could better help an alcoholic recover than 
someone who fought that demon and found freedom? Who could 
better comfort a wife whose husband has left her for an affair than 
a woman who went through that agony herself? 

God intentionally allows you to go through painful experiences to 
equip you for ministry to others. The Bible says, “He comforts us in 
all our troubles so that we can comfort others. When others are troubled, 
we will be able to give them the same comfort God has given us. ” 12 

If you really desire to be used by God, you must understand a 
powerful truth: The very experiences that you have resented or 
regretted most in life—the ones you’ve wanted to hide and 
forget—are the experiences God wants to use to help others. 

They are your ministry! 

For God to use your painful experiences, you must be willing 
to share them. You have to stop covering them up, and you must 
honestly admit your faults, failures, and fears. Doing this will 
probably be your most effective ministry. People are always more 
encouraged when we share how 
God’s grace helped us in weakness 
than when we brag about our 
strengths. 

Paul understood this truth, so he 
was honest about his bouts with 
depression. He admitted, “I think 
you ought to know, dear brothers, 
about the hard time we went through in Asia. We were really 
crushed and overwhelmed, and feared we woidd never live through 
it. We felt we were doomed to die and saw how powerless we were to 
help ourselves; but that wasgood, for then we put everything into the 
hands of God, who alone could save us, for he can even raise the 
dead. And he did help us and saved us from a terrible death; yes, 
and we expect him to do it again and again. V13 


For God to use your 
painful experiences, you must 
be willing to share them. 

— - 


PURPOSE #4; You Were Shaped for Serving God 


24 7 



If Paul had kept his experience of doubt and depression a 
secret, millions of people would never have benefited from it. 

Only shared experiences can help others. Aldous Huxley said, 
“Experience is not what happens to you. It is what you do with 
what happens to you.” What will you do with what you’ve been 
through? Don’t waste your pain; use it to help others. 

As we’ve looked at these five ways God has shaped you for 
service, I hope you have a deeper appreciation for God’s 
sovereignty and a clearer idea of how he has prepared you for the 
purpose of serving him. Using your shape is the secret of both 
fruitfulness and fulfillment in ministry. 14 You will be most effective 
when you use your spiritual gifts and abilities in the area of your 
heart’s desire, and in a way that best expresses your personality and 
experiences. The better the fit, the more successful you will be. 


Day Thirty-one 

| 

Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: Nobody else can be me. 

Verse to Remember: “God has given each of you some 
special abilities; be sure to use them to help each other, 
passing on to others God’s many kinds of blessings.” 

1 Peter 4:10 (LB) 

i 

Question to Consider: What God-given ability or 
personal experience can I offer to my church? 

-_ _ _—- = - 


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248 










Using What God Gave You 

Since we find ourselves fashioned into 
all these excellently formed and marvelously 
functioning parts in Christ’s body, let’s just 
go ahead and be what we were made to be. 

Romans I2:$ (Msg) 

What you are is God’s gift to you; 
what you do with yourself is your gift to God. 

Danish proverb 


God deserves your best. 

He shaped you for a purpose, and he expects you to make the 
most of what you have been given. He doesn’t want you to worry 
about or covet abilities you don’t have. Instead he wants you to 
focus on talents he has given you to use. 

When you attempt to serve God in ways you’re not shaped to 
serve, it feels like forcing a square peg into a round hole. It’s 
frustrating and produces limited results. It also wastes your time, 
your talent, and your energy. The best use of your life is to serve 
God out of your shape. To do this you must discover your shape, 
learn to accept and enjoy it, and then develop it to its fullest 
potential. 


PURPOSE #4: You Were Shaped for Serving God 


249 


Discover Your Shape 

The Bible says, “Don’t act thoughtlessly, but try to find out and 
do whatever the Lord wants you to.” 1 Don’t let another day go by. 
Start finding out and clarifying what God intends for you to be 
and do. 

Begin by assessing your gifts and abilities. Take a long, 
honest look at what you are good at and what you’re not good at. 
Paul advised, “Try to have a sane estimate of your capabilities.” 2 
Make a list. Ask other people for their candid opinion. Tell them 
you’re searching for the truth, not fishing for a compliment. 
Spiritual gifts and natural abilities are always con fir med by others. 
If you think you are gifted to be a teacher or a singer and no one 
else agrees, guess what? If you want to know if you have the gift 
of leadership, just look over your shoulder! If no one is following 
you, you’re not a leader. 

Ask questions like these: Where have I seen fruit in my life that 
other people confirmed? Where have I already been successful? 
Spiritual gift tests and ability inventories can have 
some value, but they are limited in their usefulness. 
In the first place, they are standardized, so they 
'(Buy don’t take into account your uniqueness. Second, there 
are no definitions of the spiritual gifts given in the Bible, 
so any definitions are arbitrary and usually represent a 
denominational bias. Another problem is that the more mature 
you become, the more likely you are to manifest the 
characteristics of a number of the gifts. You may be serving or 
teaching or giving generously out of maturity rather than because 
it is your spiritual gift. 

The best way to discover your gifts and abilities is to experiment 
with different areas of service. I could have taken a hundred gift 
and ability tests as a young man and would have never discovered 
that I was gifted at teaching because I had never done it! It was 
only after I began accepting opportunities to speak that I saw the 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


250 


results, received confirmation from others, and realized, “God has 
gifted me to do this!” 

Many books get the discovery process backwards. They say, 
“Discover your spiritual gift and then you’ll know what ministry 
you’re supposed to have.” It actually works the exact opposite 
way. Just start serving, experimenting with different ministries, 
and then you’ll discover your gifts. 

Until you’re actually involved in 
serving, you’re not going to know 
what you’re good at. 

You have dozens of hidden 
abilities and gifts you don’t know 
you’ve got because you’ve never 


..—.. _ . 

You will never know what you’re 
good at until you try. 




tried them out. So I encourage you to try doing some things 
you’ve never done before. No matter how old you are, I urge you 
to never stop experimenting. I have met many people who 
discovered hidden talents in their seventies and eighties. I know a 
woman in her nineties who runs and wins 10K races and didn’t 
discover that she enjoyed running until she was seventy-eight! 

Don’t try to figure out your gifts before volunteering to serve 
somewhere. Just start serving. You discover your gifts by getting 
involved in ministry. Try teaching or leading or organizing or 
playing an instrument or working with teenagers. You will never 
know what you’re good at until you try. When it doesn’t work 
out, call it an “experiment,” not a failure. You will eventually 
learn what you’re good at. 

Consider your heart and your personality. Paul advised, 

“Make a careful exploration of who you are and the work you have 
been given, and then sink yourself into that A 3 Again, it helps to 
get feedback from those who know you best. Ask yourself 
questions: What do I really enjoy doing most? When do I feel 
the most fully alive? What am I doing when I lose track of 
time? Do I like routine or variety? Do I prefer serving with a 
team or by myself? Am I more introverted or extroverted? Am I 


PURPOSE #4: You Were Shaped for Serving God 


251 



more a thinker or a feeler? Which do I enjoy more—competing 
or cooperating? 

Examine your experiences and extract the lessons you have 
learned. Review your life and think about how it has shaped you. 
Moses told the Israelites, “Remember today what you have learned 
about the Lord through your experiences with him. Vi Forgotten 
experiences are worthless; that’s a good reason to keep a spiritual 
journal. Paul worried that the believers in Galatia would waste the 
pain they had been through. He said, “Were all your experiences 
wasted? I hope not!” s 

We rarely see God’s good purpose in pain or failure or 
embarrassment while it is happening. When Jesus washed Peter’s 
feet, he said, “Ton do not realize now what I am doing, but later 
you will understand.” 6 Only in hindsight do we understand how 
God intended a problem for good. 

Extracting the lessons from your experiences takes time. I 
recommend that you take an entire weekend for a life review 
retreat, where you pause to see how God has worked in the 
various defining moments of your life and consider how he wants 
to use those lessons to help others. There are resources that can 
help you do this. 7 

Accept and Enjoy Your Shape 

Since God knows what’s best for you, you should gratefully 
accept the way he has fashioned you. The Bible says, “What right 
have you, a human being, to cross-examine God? The pot has no 
right to say to the potter: c Why did you make me this shape?’ Surely a 
potter can do what he likes with the clay!” 8 

Your shape was sovereignly determined by God for his purpose, 
so you shouldn’t resent it or reject it. Instead of trying to reshape 
yourself to be like someone else, you should celebrate the shape 
God has given only to you. “Christ has given each of us special 
abilities—whatever he wants us to have out of his rich storehouse of 
3tfs” 9 


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252 


Part of accepting your shape is recognizing your limitations. 
Nobody is good at everything, and no one is called to be 
everything. We all have defined roles. Paul understood that his 
calling was not to accomplish everything or please everyone but 
to focus only on the particular ministry God had shaped him 
for. 10 He said, “Our goal is to stay within the boundaries of God’s 
plan for us.” 11 

The word boundaries refers to the fact that God assigns each of 
us a field or sphere of service. Your shape determines your 
specialty. When we try to overextend our ministry reach beyond 
what God shaped us for, we experience stress. Just as each runner 
in a race is given a different lane to run in, we must individually 
“run with patience the particular race that God has set before us.” 12 
Don’t be envious of the runner in the lane next to you; just focus 
on finishing your race. 

God wants you to enjoy using the shape he has given you. The 
Bible says, “Be sure to do what you should, for then you will enjoy the 
personal satisfaction of having done your work well, and you won’t 
need to compare yourself to anyone else.” 12 Satan will try to steal the 
joy of service from you in a couple of ways: by tempting you to 
compare your ministry with others, and by tempting you to 
conform your ministry to the expectations of others. Both are 
deadly traps that will distract you from serving in the ways God 
intended. Whenever you lose your joy in ministry, start by 
considering if either one of these 
temptations is the cause. 

The Bible warns us never to 
compare ourselves with others: “Do 
your own work well, and then you 
will have something to be proud of. 

But don’t compare yourself with 
others.” 14 There are two reasons why you should never compare 
your shape, ministry, or the results of your ministry with anyone 
else. First, you will always be able to find someone who seems to 


-— 


God wants you to enjoy using 
the shape he has given you. 


— 


PURPOSE #4; You Were Shaped for Serving God 


253 



be doing a better job than yon and you will become discouraged. 
Or you will always be able to find someone who doesn’t seem as 
effective as you and you will get hill of pride. Either attitude will 
take you out of service and rob you of your joy. 

Paul said it is foolish to compare ourselves with others. He said, 
“We do not dare to classify or compare ourselves with some who 
commend themselves. When they measure themselves by themselves 
and compare themselves with themselves, they are 
not wise. ” 1 5 The Message paraphrase says, “In all 
this comparing and grading and competing, they 
quite miss the point.” 16 

You will find that people who do not 
understand your shape for ministry will criticize 
you and try to get you to conform to what they think you should 
be doing. Ignore them. Paul often had to deal with critics who 
misunderstood and maligned his service. His response was always 
the same: Avoid comparisons, resist exaggerations, and seek only 
God’s commendation. 17 

One of the reasons Paul was used so greatly by God was that he 
refused to be distracted by criticism or by comparing his ministry 
with others or by being drawn into fruitless debates about his 
ministry. As John Bunyan said, “If my life is ffuidess, it doesn’t 
matter who praises me, and if my life is fruitful, it doesn’t matter 
who criticizes me.” 

Keep Developing your Shape 

Jesus’ parable of the talents illustrates that God expects us to 
make the most of what he gives us. We are to cultivate our gifts 
and abilities, keep our hearts aflame, grow our character and 
personality, and broaden our experiences so we will be 
increasingly more effective in our service. Paul told the 
Philippians to “keep on growing in your knowledge and 
understanding,” 18 and he reminded Timothy, “Kindle afresh the 
gift of God which is in you.” 19 


DAY THIRTY-TWO: 

USING WHAT 
GOD GAVE 
YOU 


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254 


If you don’t exercise your muscles, they weaken and atrophy. In 
the same way, if you don’t utilize the abilities and skills God has 
given you, you will lose them. Jesus taught the parable of the 
talents to emphasize this truth. Referring to the servant who 
failed to use his one talent, the master said, “Take the talent from 
him and give it to the one who has the ten talents.” 20 Fail to use 
what you’ve been given and you’ll lose it. Use the ability you’ve 
got and God will increase it. Paul told Timothy, “Be sure to use the 
abilities God has given you.... Put these abilities to work.” 21 

Whatever gifts you have been given can be enlarged and 
developed through practice. For instance, no one gets the gift of 
teaching fully developed. But with study, feedback, and practice, a 
“good” teacher can become a better teacher, and with time, grow 
to be a master teacher. Don’t settle for a half-developed gift. 
Stretch yourself and learn all you can. “Concentrate on doing your 
best for God, work you won’t be ashamed of.” 22 Take advantage of 
every training opportunity to develop your shape and 
sharpen your serving skills. 

In heaven we are going to serve God forever. Right 
now, we can prepare for that eternal service by 
practicing on earth. Like athletes preparing for the Olympics, 
we keep training for that big day: “They do it for a gold medal 
that tarnishes and fades. You’re after one that’s gold eternally.” 22 

We’re getting ready for eternal responsibilities and rewards. 


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Day Thirty-two 
Thinking about My Purpose 

Point to Ponder: God deserves my best. 


Verse to Remember: “Do your best to present yourself to 
God as one approved, a workman who does not need to be 
ashamed and who correctly handles the word of truth 

2 Timothy 2:15 (NIV) 

i 

Question to Consider: How can I make the best use of 
what God has given me? 

__-_— _ . 


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How Real Servants Act 


Whoever wants to be great 
must become a servant.” 

Mark 10:43 (Msg) 

You can tell what they are by what they do. 

Matthew 7:16 (CEV) 


We serve God by serving others. 

The world defines greatness in terms of power, possessions, 
prestige, and position. If you can demand service from others, 
you’ve arrived. In our self-serving culture with its me-first 
mentality, acting like a servant is not a popular concept. 

Jesus, however, measured greatness in terms of service, not 
status. God determines your greatness by how many people you 
serve, not how many people serve you. This is so contrary to the 
world’s idea of greatness that we have a hard time understanding 
it, much less practicing it. The disciples argued about who 
deserved the most prominent position, and 2,000 years later, 
Christian leaders still jockey for position and prominence in 
churches, denominations, and parachurch ministries. 

Thousands of books have been written on leadership, but few 
on servanthood. Everyone wants to lead; no one wants to be a 


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servant. We would rather be generals than privates. Even 
Christians want to be “servant-leaders,” not just plain servants. 

But to be like Jesus is to be a servant. That’s what he called 
himself. 

While knowing your shape is important for serving God, 
having the heart of a servant is even more important. Remember, 
God shaped you for service, not for self-centeredness. Without a 
servant’s heart, you will be tempted to misuse your shape for 
personal gain. You will also be tempted to use it as an excuse to 
exempt yourself front meeting some needs. 

God often tests our hearts by asking us to serve in ways we’re 
not shaped. If you see a man fall into a ditch, God expects you to 
help him out, not say, “I don’t have the gift of mercy or service.” 
While you may not be gifted for a particular task, you may be 
called to do it if no one gifted at it is around. Your primary 

ministry should be in the area of 
your shape, but your secondary 
service is wherever you’re needed at 
the moment. 

Your shape reveals your ministry, 
but your servant’s heart will reveal 
your maturity. No special talent or 
gift is required to stay after a 
meeting to pick up trash or stack chairs. Anyone can be a servant. 
All it requires is character. 

It is possible to serve in church for a lifetime without ever 
being a servant. You must have a servant’s heart. How can you 
know if you have the heart of a servant? Jesus said, “Ton can tell 
what they are by what they do. V1 

Real servants make themselves available to serve. Servants 
don’t fill up their time with other pursuits that could limit their 
availability. They want to be ready to jump into service when 
called on. Much like a soldier, a servant must always be standing 
by for duty: “No soldier in active service entangles himself in the 


Tour shape reveals your 
ministry, hut your servant’s 
heart will reveal your maturity. 

— - 


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affairs of everyday life, so that he may please the one who enlisted 
him.” 2 If you only serve when it’s convenient for you, you’re not 
a real servant. Real servants do what’s needed, even when it’s 
inconvenient. 

Are you available to God anytime? Can he mess up your plans 
without you becoming resentful? As a servant, you don’t get to 
pick and choose when or where you will serve. Being a servant 
means giving up the right to control your schedule and allowing 
God to interrupt it whenever he needs to. 

If you will remind yourself at the start of every day that you are 
God’s servant, interruptions won’t frustrate you as much, because 
your agenda will be whatever God wants to bring into your life. 
Servants see interruptions as divine appointments for ministry and 
are happy for the opportunity to practice serving. 

Real servants pay attention to needs. Servants are always on 
the lookout for ways to help others. When they see a need, they 
seize the moment to meet it, just as the Bible commands us: 

“Whenever we have the opportunity, we have to do what is good for 
everyone, especially for the family of believers .” 3 When God puts 
someone in need right in front of you, he is giving you the 
opportunity to grow in servanthood. Notice that God says the 
needs of your church family are to be given preference, not put at 
the bottom of your “things to do” list. 

We miss many occasions for serving because we lack sensitivity 
and spontaneity. Great opportunities to serve never last long. 

They pass quickly, sometimes never to return again. You may only 
get one chance to serve that person, so take advantage of 
the moment. “Never tell your neighbors to wait until 
tomorrow if you can help them now.” 4 jfoftif n/Rfc 

John Wesley was an incredible servant of God. His 
motto was “Do all the good you can, by all the means you V 
can, in all the ways you can, in all the places you can, at all the 
times you can, to all the people you can, as long as you ever can.” 
That is greatness. You can begin by looking for small tasks that no 


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one else wants to do. Do these little things as if they were great 
things, because God is watching. 

Real servants do their best with what they have. Servants 
don’t make excuses, procrastinate, or wait for better 
circumstances. Servants never say, “One of these days” or “When 
the time is right.” They just do what needs to be done. The Bible 
says, “Ifyou wait for perfect conditions, you will never get anything 
done.” s God expects you to do what you can, with what you have, 
wherever you are. Less-than-perfect service is always better than 
the best intention. 

One reason many people never serve is that they fear they are 
not good enough to serve. They have believed the lie that serving 
God is only for superstars. Some churches have fostered this myth 
by making “excellence” an idol, which makes people of average 
talent hesitant to get involved. 

You may have heard it said, “If it can’t be done with excellence, 
don’t do it.” Well, Jesus never said that! The truth is, almost 
everything we do is done poorly when we first start doing it— 
that’s how we learn. At Saddleback Church, we practice the “good 
enough” principle: It doesn’t have to be perfect for God to use 
and bless it. We would rather involve thousands of regular folks in 
ministry than have a perfect church run by a few elites. 

Real servants do every task with equal dedication. Whatever 
they do, servants “do it with all their heart.” 6 The size of the task 
is irrelevant. The only issue is, does it need to be done? 

You will never arrive at the state in life where you’re too 
important to help with menial tasks. God will never exempt you 
from the mundane. It’s a vital part of your character curriculum. 
The Bible says, “If you think you are too important to help someone 
in need, you are only fooling yourself Tou are really a nobody.” 7 It is 
in these small services that we grow like Christ. 

Jesus specialized in menial tasks that everyone else tried to 
avoid: washing feet, helping children, fixing breakfast, and serving 
lepers. Nothing was beneath him, because he came to serve. It 


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wasn’t in spite o/his greatness that he did these things, bnt because 
of it, and he expects us to follow his example. 8 

Small tasks often show a big heart. Your servant’s heart is 
revealed in little acts that others don’t think of doing, as when 
Paul gathered brushwood for a fire to warm everyone after a 
shipwreck. 9 He was just as exhausted as everyone else, but he did 
what everyone needed. No task is beneath you when you have a 
servant’s heart. 

Great opportunities often disguise themselves in small tasks. 

The little things in life determine the big things. Don’t look for 
great tasks to do for God. Just do the not-so-great stuff, and God 
will assign you whatever he wants you to do. But before 
attempting the extraordinary, try serving in ordinary ways. 10 

There will always be more people willing to do “great” things 
for God than there are people willing to do the little things. The 
race to be a leader is crowded, but the field is wide open for those 
willing to be servants. Sometimes you serve upward to those in 
authority, and sometimes you serve 
downward to those in need. Either 
way, you develop a servant’s heart 
when you’re willing to do anything 
needed. 

Real servants are faithful to 
their ministry. Servants finish their 
tasks, fulfill their responsibilities, keep their promises, and 
complete their commitments. They don’t leave a job half undone, 
and they don’t quit when they get discouraged. They are 
trustworthy and dependable. 

Faithfulness has always been a rare quality. 11 Most people don’t 
know the meaning of commitment. They make commitments 
casually, then break them for the slightest reason without any 
hesitation, remorse, or regret. Every week, churches and other 
organizations must improvise because volunteers didn’t prepare, 
didn’t show up, or didn’t even call to say they weren’t coming. 


--__ . 

Great opportunities often 
disguise themselves in small tasks. 

— - 


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261 



Can you be counted on by others? Are there promises you need 
to keep, vows you need to fulfill, or commitments you need to 
honor? This is a test. God is testing your faithfulness. If you pass 
the test, you’re in good company: Abraham, Moses, Samuel, 
David, Daniel, Timothy, and Paul were all called faithful servants 
of God. Even better, God has promised to reward your 

faithfulness in eternity. Imagine what it will feel like one day 
to have God say to you, “Well done, my good and 
faithful servant. Tou have been faithful in handling 
this small amount, so now I will give you many more 
responsibilities. Let’s celebrate together!” 12 
By the way, faithful servants never retire. They serve 
faithfully as long as they’re alive. You can retire from your 
career, but you will never retire from serving God. 

Real servants maintain a low profile. Servants don’t promote 
or call attention to themselves. Instead of acting to impress and 
dressing for success, they “put on the apron of humility, to serve one 
another.” 12 If recognized for their service, they humbly accept it 
but don’t allow notoriety to distract them from their work. 

Paul exposed a land of service that appears to be spiritual but is 
really just a put-on, a show, an act to get attention. He called it 
“eyeservice”' 4 —serving in order to impress people with how 
spiritual we are. This was a sin of the Pharisees. They turned 
helping others, giving, and even prayer into a performance for 
others. Jesus hated this attitude and warned, “When you do good 
deeds, don’t try to show off. If you do, you won’t get a reward from 
your Father in heaven.” 12 

Self-promotion and servanthood don’t mix. Real servants don’t 
serve for the approval or applause of others. They live for an 
audience of One. As Paul said, “If I were still trying to please men, 

I would not be a servant of Christ.” 16 

You won’t find many real servants in the limelight; in fact, they 
avoid it when possible. They are content with quietly serving in 
the shadows. Joseph is a great example. He didn’t draw attention 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


262 


to himself, but quietly served Potiphar, then his jailer, then 
Pharaoh’s baker and wine taster, and God blessed that attitude. 
When Pharaoh promoted him to prominence, Joseph still 
maintained a servant’s heart, even with his brothers, who had 
betrayed him. 

Unfortunately, many leaders today start off as servants but end 
up as celebrities. They become addicted to attention, unaware 
that always being in the spotlight blinds you. 

You may be serving in obscurity in some small place, feeling 
unknown and unappreciated. Listen: God put you where you are 
for a purpose! He has every hair on your head numbered, and he 
knows your address. You had better stay put until he chooses to 
move you. He will let you know if he wants you somewhere else. 
Your ministry matters to the kingdom of God. “When Christ... 
shows up again on this earth, you’ll show up, too—the real you, the 
glorious you. Meanwhile, be content with obscurity.” 17 

There are more than 750 “Halls of Fame” in America and 
more than 450 “Who’s Who” publications, but you won’t find 
many real servants in these places. Notoriety 
means nothing to real servants because they 
know the difference between prominence and 
significance. You have several prominent 
features on your body that you could live 
without. It is the hidden parts of your body 
that are indispensable. The same is true in the Body of Christ. 
The most significant service is often the service that is unseen. 18 

In heaven God is going to openly reward some of his most 
obscure and unknown servants—people we have never heard of 
on earth, who taught emotionally disturbed children, cleaned up 
after incontinent elderly, nursed AIDS patients, and served in 
thousands of other unnoticed ways. 

Knowing this, don’t be discouraged when your service is 
unnoticed or taken for granted. Keep on serving God! “Throw 
yourselves into the work of the Master, confident that nothing you do 


DAY THIRTY-THREE: 

HOW REAL 
SERVANTS ACT 


PURPOSE #4: You Were Shaped for Serving God 


263 


for him is a waste of time or effort.” 19 Even the smallest service is 
noticed by God and will be rewarded. Remember the words of 
Jesus: “If as my representatives, you give even a cup of cold water to 
a little child, you will surely be rewarded.” 20 


_ 


Day Thirty-three 
Thinking about My Purpose 

Point to Ponder: I serve God by serving others. 

Verse to Remember: “Ifyou give even a cup of cold 
water to one of the least of my followers, you will surely be 
rewarded.” Matthew 10:42 (NLT) 


“ 

| 

I 

I 

l 

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Question to Consider: Which of the six characteristics 
of real servants offers the greatest challenge to me? 

_„ __— > 


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Thinking Like a Servant 

My servant Caleb thinks differently 
and follows me completely. 

Numbers 14:24 (NCV) 

Think of yourselves the way 
Christ Jesus thought of himself 
Philippians. 2:5 (Msg) 


Service starts in your mind. 

To be a servant requires a mental shift, a change in your 
attitudes. God is always more interested in why we do something 
than in what we do. Attitudes count more than achievements. 
King Amaziah lost God’s favor because “he did what was right in 
the sight of the Lord, yet not with a true heart.” 1 Real servants serve 
God with a mindset of five attitudes. 

Servants think more about others than about themselves. 
Servants focus on others, not themselves. This is true humility: 
not thinking less of ourselves but thinking of ourselves less. They 
are self-forgetful. Paul said, “Forgetyourselves long enough to lend a 
helping hand.” 2 This is what it means to “lose your life”— 
forgetting yourself in service to others. When we stop focusing on 
our own needs, we become aware of the needs around us. 


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265 


Jesus “emptied himself by taking on the form of a servant.” 3 
When was the last time you emptied yourself for someone else’s 
benefit? You can’t be a servant if you’re full of yourself. It’s only 
when we forget ourselves that we do the things that deserve to be 
remembered. 

Unfortunately, a lot of our service is often self-serving. We 
serve to get others to like us, to be admired, or to achieve our 
own goals. That is manipulation, not ministry. The whole time 
we’re really thinking about ourselves and how noble and 
wonderful we are. Some people try to use service as a bargaining 
tool with God: “I’ll do this for you God, if you’ll do something 

for me.” Real servants don’t try to 
use God for their purposes. They 
let God use them for his purposes. 

The quality of self-forgetfulness, 
like faithfulness, is extremely rare. 
Out of all the people Paul knew, 
Timothy was the only example he 
could point to. 4 Thinking like a 
servant is difficult because it challenges the basic problem of my 
life: I am, by nature, selfish. I think most about me. That’s why 
humility is a daily struggle, a lesson I must relearn over and over. 
The opportunity to be a servant confronts me dozens of times a 
day, in which I’m given the choice to decide between meeting my 
needs or the needs of others. Self-denial is the core of servanthood. 

We can measure our servant’s heart by how we respond when 
others treat us like servants. How do you react when you’re taken 
for granted, bossed around, or treated as an inferior? The Bible 
says, “If someone takes unfair advantage of you, use the occasion to 
practice the servant life.” 3 

Servants think like stewards, not owners. Servants 
remember that God owns it all. In the Bible, a steward was a 
servant entrusted to manage an estate. Joseph was this kind of 
servant as a prisoner in Egypt. Potiphar entrusted Joseph with his 


Vgfe's -- 

Real servants don’t try to use 
God for their purposes. They let 
God use them for his purposes. 

— - 


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2 66 



home. Then the jailer entrusted Joseph with his jail. Eventually 
Pharaoh entrusted the entire nation to him. Servanthood and 
stewardship go together, 6 since God expects us to be trustworthy 
in both. The Bible says, “The one thing required of such servants is 
that they be faithful to their master.” 7 How are you handling the 
resources God has entrusted to you? 

To become a real servant you are going to have to settle the 
issue of money in your life. Jesus said, “No servant can serve Wo 
masters.... Ton cannot serve both God and Money.”* He didn’t say, 
“You should not,” but “You cannot .” It is impossible. Living for 
ministry and living for money are mutually exclusive goals. Which 
one will you choose? If you’re a servant of God, you can’t 
moonlight for yourself. All your time belongs to God. He insists 
on exclusive allegiance, not part-time faithfulness. 

Money has the greatest potential to replace God in your life. 
More people are sidetracked from serving by materialism than by 
anything else. They say, “After I achieve my financial goals, I’m 
going to serve God.” That is a foolish decision they will regret for 
eternity. When Jesus is your Master, money serves you, but if 
money is your master, you become its slave. Wealth is certainly 
not a sin, but failing to use it for God’s glory is. Servants of God 
are always more concerned about ministry than money. 

The Bible is very clear: God uses money to test your 
faithfulness as a servant. That is why Jesus talked more about 
money than he did about either heaven or hell. He said, “If you 
have not been trustworthy in handling worldly wealth, who will trust 
you with true riches?” 9 How you manage your money affects how 
much God can bless your life. 

In chapter 31,1 mentioned two kinds of people: Kingdom 
Builders and Wealth Builders. Both are gifted at making a 
business grow, making deals or sales, and making a profit. Wealth 
Builders continue to amass wealth for themselves no matter how 
much they make, but Kingdom Builders change the rules of the 
game. They still try to make as much money as they can, but they 


PURPOSE #4; You Were Shaped for Serving God 


2 67 


do it in order to give it away. They use the wealth to fund God’s 
church and its mission in the world. 

At Saddleback Church, we have a group of CEOs and business 
owners who are trying to make as much as they can so they can 
give as much as they can to further the kingdom of God. I 
encourage you to talk with your pastor and begin a Kingdom 
Builders’ group in your church. For help see appendix 2. 

Servants think about their work, not what others are 
doing. They don’t compare, criticize, or compete with other 

servants or ministries. They’re too busy doing the 
work God has given them. 

Competition between God’s servants is illogical 
for many reasons: We’re all on the same team; our 
goal is to make God look good, not ourselves; 
we’ve been given different assignments; and we’re 
all uniquely shaped. Paul said, “We will not 
compare ourselves with each other as if one of us were better and 
another worse. We have far more interesting things to do with our 
lives. Each of us is an original.” 10 

There’s no place for petty jealousy between servants. When 
you’re busy serving, you don’t have time to be critical. Any time 
spent criticizing others is time that could be spent ministering. 
When Martha complained to Jesus that Mary was not helping 
with the work, she lost her servant’s heart. Real servants don’t 
complain of unfairness, don’t have pity-parties, and don’t resent 
those not serving. They just trust God and keep serving. 

It is not our job to evaluate the Master’s other servants. The 
Bible says, “Who are you to criticize someone else’s servant? The Lord 
will determine whether his servant has been successful.” 11 It is also 
not our job to defend ourselves against criticism. Let your Master 
handle it. Follow the example of Moses, who showed true 
humility in the face of opposition, as did Nehemiah, whose 
response to critics was simply, “My work is too important to stop 
now and ... visit with you.” 12 


DAY THIRTY- 
FOUR: 

THINKING 
LIKE A 
SERVANT 


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268 


If you serve like Jesus, you can expect to be criticized. The 
world, and even much of the church, does not understand what 
God values. One of the most beautiful acts of love shown to Jesus 
was criticized by the disciples. Mary took the most valuable thing 
she owned, expensive perfume, and poured it over Jesus. Her 
lavish service was called “a waste” by the disciples, but Jesus called 
it “significant, ” 13 and that’s all that mattered. Your service for 
Christ is never wasted regardless of what others say. 

Servants base their identity in Christ. Because they 
remember they are loved and accepted by grace, servants don’t 
have to prove their worth. They willingly accept jobs that insecure 
people would consider “beneath” them. One of the most 
profound examples of serving from a secure self-image is Jesus’ 
washing the feet of his disciples. Washing feet was the equivalent 
of being a shoeshine boy, a job devoid of status. But Jesus knew 
who he was, so the task didn’t threaten his self-image. The Bible 
says, “Jesus knew that the Father had put all things under his power, 
and that he had come from God ... so he got up from the meal, 
took off his outer clothing, and wrapped a towel around 
his waist.” u 

If you’re going to be a servant, you must settle 
your identity in Christ. Only secure people can serve. \ 

Insecure people are always worrying about how they appear 
to others. They fear exposure of their weaknesses and hide 
beneath layers of protective pride and pretensions. The more 
insecure you are, the more you will want people to serve you, and 
the more you will need their approval. 

Henri Nouwen said, “In order to be of service to others we 
have to die to them; that is, we have to give up measuring our 
meaning and value with the yardstick of others. . . . thus we 
become free to be compassionate.” When you base your worth 
and identity on your relationship to Christ, you are freed from 
the expectations of others, and that allows you to really serve 
them best. 


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269 


Servants don’t need to cover their walls with plaques and 
awards to validate their work. They don’t insist on being 
addressed by titles, and they don’t wrap themselves in robes of 
superiority. Servants find status symbols unnecessary, and they 
don’t measure their worth by their achievements. Paul said, “You 
may brag about yourself, but the only approval that counts is the 
Lord’s approval. ” 15 

If anyone had the chance of a lifetime to flaunt his connections 
and “name-drop,” it was James, the half-brother of Jesus. He had 
the credentials of growing up with Jesus as his brother. Yet, in 
introducing his letter, he simply referred to himself as “a servant 
of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ.” 16 The closer you get to Jesus, 
the less you need to promote yourself. 

Servants think of ministry as an opportunity, not an 
obligation. They enjoy helping people, meeting needs, and 
doing ministry. They “serve the Lord with gladness.” 17 Why do 
they serve with gladness? Because they love the Lord, they’re 
grateful for his grace, they know serving is the highest use of 
life, and they know God has promised a reward. Jesus promised, 

“The Father will honor and reward 
anyone who serves me.” 18 Paul said, 
“He will not forget how hard you 
have worked for him and how you 
have shown your love to him by 
caring for other Christians.” 19 

Imagine what could happen if 
just 10 percent of all Christians in 
the world got serious about their role as real servants. Imagine all 
the good that could be done. Are you willing to be one of those 
people? It doesn’t matter what your age is, God will use you if 
you will begin to act and think like a servant. Albert Schweitzer 
said, “The only really happy people are those who have learned 
how to serve.” 


-—- 

The closer you get to Jesus, 
the less you need 
to promote yourself 


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1 


_ 


Day Thirty-four 
Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: To be a servant I must think like a 
servant. 


Verse to Remember: “Tour attitude should be the same 
as that of Christ Jesus.” Philippians 2:5 (NIV) 


I 


i 


i 


Question to Consider: Am I usually more concerned 
about being served or finding ways to serve others? 

____ . * 


PURPOSE #4: You Were Shaped for Serving God 


271 









God’s Power in Your Weakness 


We are weak... yet by God’s power we will 
live with him to serve you. 

2 Corinthians 13:4 (NIV) 

I am with you; that is all you need. My power 
shows up best in weak people. 

2 Corinthians 12:9a (LB) 


God loves to use weak people. 

Everyone has weaknesses. In fact, you have a bundle of flaws 
and imperfections: physical, emotional, intellectual, and spiritual. 
You may also have uncontrollable circumstances that weaken you, 
such as financial or relational limitations. The more important 
issue is what you do with these. Usually we deny our weaknesses, 
defend them, excuse them, hide them, and resent them. This 
prevents God from using them the way he desires. 

God has a different perspective on your weaknesses. He says, 
“My thoughts and my ways are higher than yours,” 1 so he often acts 
in ways that are the exact opposite of what we expect. We think 
that God only wants to use our strengths, but he also wants to 
use our weaknesses for his glory. 

The Bible says, “God purposely chose ... what the world considers 
weak in order to shame the powerful.” 2 Your weaknesses are not an 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


2.72. 


accident. God deliberately allowed them in yonr life for the 
purpose of demonstrating his power through you. 

God has never been impressed with strength or self-sufficiency. 
In fact, he is drawn to people who are weak and admit it. Jesus 
regarded this recognition of our need as being “poor in spirit. ” It’s 
the number one attitude he blesses. 3 

The Bible is filled with examples of how God loves to use 
imperfect, ordinary people to do extraordinary things in spite of 
their weaknesses. If God only used perfect people, nothing would 
ever get done, because none of us is flawless. That God uses 
imperfect people is encouraging news for all of us. 

A weakness, or “thorn” as Paul called it, 4 is not a sin or a vice or 
a character defect that you can change, such as overeating or 
impatience. A weakness is any limitation that you inherited or 
have no power to change. It may be a physical limitation, like a 
handicap, a chronic illness, naturally low energy, or a disability. It 
may be an emotional limitation, such as a trauma scar, a hurtful 
memory, a personality quirk, or a hereditary disposition. Or it 
may be a talent or intellectual limitation. We’re not all super 
bright or talented. 

When you think of the limitation in your life, you may be 
tempted to conclude, “God could never use me.” But God is 
never limited by our limitations. In 
fact, he enjoys putting his great 
power into ordinary containers. 

The Bible says, “We are like clay jars 
in which this treasure is stored. The 
real power comes from God and not 
from us.” 5 Like common pottery, 
we are fragile and flawed and break easily. But God will use us if 
we allow him to work through our weaknesses. For that to 
happen, we must follow the model of Paul. 

Admit your weaknesses. Own up to your imperfections. Stop 
pretending to have it all together, and be honest about yourself. 


. XJ&T2, - -- . 

if God only used pe feet people, 
nothing would ever get done. 

— - 


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273 



Instead of living in denial or making excuses, take the time to 
identify your personal weaknesses. You might make a list of 
them. 

Two great confessions in the New Testament illustrate what we 
need for healthy living. The first was Peter’s, who said to Jesus, 
“Ton are the Christ, the Son of the living God.” 6 The second 
confession was Paul’s, who said to an idolizing crowd, “We are 
only human beings like you.” 7 If you want God to use you, you 
must know who God is and know who you are. Many Christians, 
especially leaders, forget the second truth: We’re only human! If it 
takes a crisis to get you to admit this, God won’t hesitate to allow 
it, because he loves you. 

Be content with your weaknesses. Paul said, “I am glad to 
boast about my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may work 
through me. Since l know it is all for Christ’s good, I am quite 
content with my weaknesses.” 8 At first this doesn’t make sense. We 
want to be freed from our weaknesses, not be content with 
them! But contentment is an expression of faith in the goodness 
of God. It says, “God, I believe you love me and know what’s 
best for me.” 

Paul gives us several reasons to be content with our inborn 
weaknesses. First, they cause us to depend on God. Referring to 
his own weakness, which God refused to take away, Paul said, “I 
am quite happy about c the thorn, ’... for when I am weak, then I am 
strong—the less I have, the more I depend on him.” 9 Whenever you 
feel weak, God is reminding you to depend on him. 

Our weaknesses also prevent arrogance. They keep us humble. 
Paul said, “So I wouldn’t get a big head, I was given the gift of a 
handicap to keep me in constant touch with my limitations.” 16 God 
often attaches a major weakness to a major strength to keep our 
egos in check. A limitation can act as a governor to keep us from 
going too fast and running ahead of God. 

When Gideon recruited an army of 32,000 to fight the 
Midianites, God whittled it down to just 300, making the odds 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


274 


450 to 1 as they went out to fight 135,000 enemy troops. It 
appeared to be a recipe for disaster, but God did it so Israel 
would know it was God’s power, not their own strength, that 
saved them. 

Our weaknesses also encourage fellowship between believers. 
While strength breeds an independent spirit (“I don’t need 
anyone else”), our limitations show 
how much we need each other. 

When we weave the weak strands of 
our lives together, a rope of great 
strength is created. Vance Havner 
quipped, “Christians, like 
snowflakes, are frail, but when they 
stick together they can stop traffic.” 

Most of all, our weaknesses increase our capacity for sympathy 
and ministry. We are far more likely to be compassionate and 
considerate of the weaknesses of others. God wants you to have a 
Christlike ministry on earth. That means other people are going 
to find healing in your wounds. Your greatest life messages and 
your most effective ministry wifi come out of your deepest hurts. 
The things you’re most embarrassed about, most ashamed of, and 
most reluctant to share are the very tools God can use most 
powerfully to heal others. 

The great missionary Hudson Taylor said, “All God’s giants 
were weak people.” Moses’ weakness was his temper. It caused 
him to murder an Egyptian, strike the rock he was supposed to 
speak to, and break the tablets of the Ten Commandments. Yet 
God transformed Moses into “the humblest man on earth.” 11 

Gideon’s weakness was low self-esteem and deep insecurities, 
but God transformed him into a “mighty man of valor.” 12 
Abraham’s weakness was fear. Not once, but twice, he claimed his 
wife was his sister to protect himself. But God transformed 
Abraham into “the father of those who have faith.” 12 Impulsive, 
weak-willed Peter became “a rock,” 14 the adulterer David became 


Tour most effective ministry 
will come out of your 
deepest hurts. 

- - 


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275 



“a man after my own heart,” 1 * and John, one of the arrogant 
“Sons of Thunder,” became the “Apostle of Love.” 

The list could go on and on. “It would take too long to recount 
the stories of the faith of . .. Barak, Samson, Jephthah, David, 
Samuel, and all the prophets.. .. their weakness was turned to 
strength .” 16 God specializes in turning weaknesses into 
strengths. He wants to take your greatest weakness and 
transform it. 

Honestly share your weaknesses. Ministry begins with 
vulnerability. The more you let down your guard, take off your 
mask, and share your struggles, the more God will be able to use 
you in serving others. 

Paul modeled vulnerability in all his letters. He openly shared 

• His failures: “When I want to do good, I don’t, and when I try 
not to do wrong, I do it anyway .” 17 

• His feelings: “I have told you all my feelings.” 1 * 

• His frustrations: “We were crushed and completely over¬ 
whelmed, and we thought we would never live through it .” 19 

• His fears: “When I came to you, I was weak and fearful and 
trembling. ” 20 

Of course, vulnerability is risky. It can be scary to lower your 
defenses and open up your life to others. When you reveal your 
failures, feelings, frustrations, and fears, you risk rejection. But the 
benefits are worth the risk. Vulnerability is emotionally liberating. 

Opening up relieves stress, defuses your fears, and is the first 

__ step to freedom. 

We have already seen that God “givesgrace to the 
humble,” but many misunderstand humility. 

Humility is not putting yourself down or denying your 
strengths; rather, it is being honest about your 
weaknesses. The more honest you are, the more of God’s grace 
you get. You will also receive grace from others. Vulnerability is 
an endearing quality; we are naturally drawn to humble people. 


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Pretentiousness repels but authenticity attracts, and vulnerability 
is the pathway to intimacy. 

This is why God wants to use your weaknesses, not just your 
strengths. If all people see are your strengths, they get 
discouraged and think, “Well, good for her, but I’ll never be able 
to do that.” But when they see God using you in spite of your 
weaknesses, it encourages them to think, “Maybe God can use 
me!” Our strengths create competition, but our 
weaknesses create community. 

At some point in your life you must decide 
whether you want to impress people or influence 
people. You can impress people from a distance, 
but you must get close to influence them, and 
when you do that, they will be able to see your 
flaws. That’s okay. The most essential quality for 
leadership is not perfection, but credibility. People must be able 
to trust you, or they won’t follow you. How do you build 
credibility? Not by pretending to be perfect, but by being honest. 

Glory in your weaknesses. Paul said, “I am going to boast only 
about how weak I am and how great God is to use such weakness for 
his glory.” 21 Instead of posing as self-confident and invincible, see 
yourself as a trophy of grace. When Satan points out your 
weaknesses, agree with him and fill your heart with praise for Jesus, 
who “understands every weakness of ours,” 22 and for the Holy 
Spirit, who “helps us in our weakness. ” 23 

Sometimes, however, God turns a strength into a weakness 
in order to use us even more. Jacob was a manipulator who 
spent his life scheming and then running from the 
consequences. One night he wrestled with God and said, “I’m 
not letting go until you bless me.” God said, “All right,” but 
then he grabbed Jacob’s thigh and dislocated his hip. What is 
the significance of that? 

God touched Jacob’s strength (the thigh muscle is the 
strongest in the body) and turned it into a weakness. From that 


DAY THIRTY- 
FIVE: 

GOD’S 
POWER IN 
YOUR 
WEAKNESS 


PURPOSE #4: You Were Shaped for Serving God 


2 77 


day forward, Jacob walked with a limp so he could never run 
away again. It forced him to lean on God whether he liked it or 
not. If you want God to bless you and use you greatly, you must 
be willing to walk with a limp the rest of your life, because God 
uses weak people. 




Day Thirty-five 
Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: God works best when I admit my 
weakness. 

Verse to Remember: “My grace is sufficient for you, my 
power is made perfect in weakness. ” 

2 Corinthians 12:9a (NIV) 

Question to Consider: Am I limiting God’s power in 
my life by trying to hide my weaknesses? What do I 
need to be honest about in order to help others? 




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278 








PURPOSE #5 



YOU WERE MADE 
FORA MISSION 


The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life, 
and he who wins souls is wise. 
Proverbs 1130 (NIV) 



Made for a Mission 


In the same way that you gave me 
a mission in the world, 

I give them a mission in the world. 

John 17:18 (Msg) 

The most important thing is 
that I complete my mission, 
the work that the Lord Jesus gave me. 
Acts 20:24 (NCV) 


You were made for a mission. 

God is at work in the world, and he wants you to join him. 

This assignment is called your mission. God wants you to have 
both a ministry in the Body of Christ and a mission in the world. 
Your ministry is your service to believers, 1 and your mission is your 
service to unbelievers. Fulfilling your mission in the world is God’s 
fifth purpose for your life. 

Your life mission is both shared and specific. One part of it is a 
responsibility you share with every other Christian, and the other 
part is an assignment that is unique to you. We will look at both 
parts in the chapters ahead. 

Our English word mission comes from the Latin word for 
“sending.” Being a Christian includes being sent into the world as 


PURPOSE #5: You Were Made for a Mission 


281 


a representative of Jesus Christ. Jesus said, “As the Father has sent 
me, I am sending you.” 2 

Jesus clearly understood his life mission on earth. At age twelve 
he said, “I must be about my Father’s business,” 2 and twenty-one 
years later, dying on the cross, he said, “It is finished.” 41 Like 
bookends, these two statements frame a well-lived, purpose- 
driven life. Jesus completed the mission the Father gave him. 

The mission Jesus had while on earth is now our mission 
because we are the Body of Christ. What he did in his physical 
body we are to continue as his spiritual body, the church. What is 
that mission? Introducing people to God! The Bible says, “Christ 
changed us from enemies into his friends and gave us the task of 
making others his friends also.” 2 

God wants to redeem human beings from Satan and reconcile 
them to himself so we can fulfill the five purposes he created us 
for: to love him, to be a part of his family, to become like him, to 
serve him, and to tell others about him. Once we are his, God 
uses us to reach others. He saves us and then sends us out. The 
Bible says, “We have been sent to speak for Christ.” 6 We are the 
messengers of God’s love and purposes to the world. 

The Importance of Your Mission 

Fulfilling your life mission on earth is an essential part of living 
for God’s glory. The Bible gives several reasons why your mission 
is so important. 

Your mission is a continuation of Jesus’ mission on earth. 

As his followers, we are to continue what Jesus started. Jesus calls 
us not only to come to him, but to go for him. Your 
day thirty-six: mission is so significant that Jesus repeated it five 

MADE FOR times, in five different ways, in five different books 

A MISSION of the Bible. 7 It is as if he was saying, “I really want 

you to get this!” Study these five commissions of 
Jesus and you will learn the details of your mission on earth—the 
when, where, why, and how. 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


282 


In the Great Commission Jesus said, “Go to the people of all 
nations and make them my disciples. Baptize them in the name of 
the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, and teach them to do 
everything I have told you .” 8 This commission was given to every 
follower of Jesus, not to pastors and missionaries alone. This is 
your commission from Jesus, and it is not optional. These words 
of Jesus are not the Great Suggestion. If you are a part of God’s 
family, your mission is mandatory. 

To ignore it would be disobedience. 

You may have been unaware that 
God holds you responsible for the 
unbelievers who live around you. 

The Bible says, “You must warn 
them so they may live. If you don’t 
speak out to warn the wicked to stop 
their evil ways, they will die in their sin. But I will hold you 
responsible for their death.” 9 You are the only Christian some 
people will ever know, and your mission is to share Jesus with 
them. 

Your mission is a wonderful privilege. Although it is a big 
responsibility, it is also an incredible honor to be used by God. 
Paul said, “God has given us the privilege of urging everyone to come 
into his favor and be reconciled to him.” 10 Your mission involves 
two great privileges: working with God and representing him. We 
get to partner with God in the building of his kingdom. Paul calls 
us “co-laborers” and says, “We are workers together with God.” 11 

Jesus has secured our salvation, put us in his family, given us his 
Spirit, and then made us his agents in the world. What a privilege! 
The Bible says, “We’re Christ’s representatives. God uses us to 
persuade men and women to drop their differences and enter into 
God’s work of making things right between them. We’re speaking for 
Christ himself now: Become friends with God.” u 

Telling others how they can have eternal life is the greatest 
thing you can do for them. If your neighbor had cancer or 


Jesus calls us not only 
to come to him, 
hut to go for him. 

— - 


PURPOSE #5: You Were Made for a Mission 


283 



AIDS and you knew the cure, it would be criminal to withhold 
that lifesaving information. Even worse is to keep secret the way 
to forgiveness, purpose, peace, and eternal life. We have the 
greatest news in the world, and sharing it is the greatest kindness 
you can show to anyone. 

One problem long-term Christians have is that they forget how 
hopeless it felt to be without Christ. We must remember that no 
matter how contented or successful people appear to be, without 
Christ they are hopelessly lost and headed for eternal separation 
from God. The Bible says, “Jesus is the only One who can save 
people.” 1 * Everybody needs Jesus. 

Your mission has eternal significance. It will impact the 
eternal destiny of other people, so it’s more important than any 
job, achievement, or goal you will reach during your life on earth. 


The consequences of your mission 
will last forever; the consequences 
of your job will not. Nothing else 
you do will ever matter as much as 




The Great Commission was 


given to every follower of Jesus. helping people establish an eternal 


relationship with God. 

This is why we must be urgent 




about our mission. Jesus said, “All of us must quickly carry out the 
tasks assigned us by the one who sent me, because there is little time 
left before the nightfalls and all work comes to an end.” l4: The clock 
is ticking down on your life mission, so don’t delay another day. 
Get started on your mission of reaching out to others now! We 
will have all of eternity to celebrate with those we have brought to 
Jesus, but we only have our lifetime in which to reach them. 

This does not mean you should quit your job to become a full¬ 
time evangelist. God wants you to share the Good News where 
you are. As a student, mother, preschool teacher, salesman, or 
manager or whatever you do, you should continually look for 
people God places in your path with whom you can share the 
gospel. 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


284 



Your mission gives your life meaning. William James said, 
“The best use of life is to spend it for something that outlasts it.” 
The truth is, only the kingdom of God is going to last. Everything 
else will eventually vanish. That is why we must live purpose- 
driven lives—lives committed to worship, fellowship, spiritual 
growth, ministry, and fulfilling our mission on earth. The results 
of these activities will last—forever! 

If you fail to fulfill your God-given mission on earth, you will 
have wasted the life God gave you. Paul said, “My life is worth 
nothing unless I use it for doing the work assigned me by the Lord 
Jesus—the work of telling others the Good News about God’s 
wonderful kindness and love.” 15 There are people on this planet 
whom only you will be able to reach, because of where you live and 
what God has made you to be. If just one person will be in heaven 
because of you, your life will have made a difference for eternity. 
Start looking around at your personal mission field and pray, 

“God, who have you put in my life for me to tell about Jesus?” 

God’s timetable for history’s conclusion is connected to the 
completion of our commission. Today there’s a growing interest 
in the second coming of Christ and the end of the world. When 
will it happen? Just before Jesus ascended to heaven the disciples 
asked him this same question, and his response was quite revealing. 
He said, “It is not for you to know the times or dates the Father has set 
by his own authority. But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit 
comes on you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all 
Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.” 16 

When the disciples wanted to talk about prophecy, Jesus 
quickly switched the conversation to evangelism. He wanted them 
to concentrate on their mission in the world. He said in essence, 
“The details of my return are none of your business. What is your 
business is the mission I’ve given you. Focus on that!” 

Speculating on the exact timing of Christ’s return is futile, 
because Jesus said, “No one knows about that day or hour, not even 
the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father.” 17 Since Jesus 


PURPOSE #5: You Were Made for a Mission 


285 


said he didn’t know the day or hour, why should you try to figure 
it out? What we do know for sure is this: Jesus will not return 
until everyone God wants to hear the Good News has heard it. 
Jesus said, “The Good News about God’s kingdom will be preached 

in all the world, to every nation. 

Then the end will come. ” 18 If you 
want Jesus to come back sooner, 
focus on fulfilling your mission, not 
figuring out prophecy. 

It is easy to get distracted and 
sidetracked from your mission 
because Satan would rather have 
you do anything besides sharing 
your faith. He will let you do all kinds of good things as long as 
you don’t take anyone to heaven with you. But the moment you 
become serious about your mission, expect the Devil to throw all 
kinds of diversions at you. When that happens, remember the 
words of Jesus: “Anyone who lets himself be distracted from the work 
1 plan for him is not fit for the Kingdom of God .” 19 

What It Costs to Fulfill Your Mission 

To fulfill your mission will require that you abandon your 
agenda and accept God’s agenda for your life. You can’t just “tack 
it on” to all the other things you’d like to do with your life. You 
must say, like Jesus, “Father,... I want your will, not mine .” 29 You 
yield your rights, expectations, dreams, plans, and ambitions to 
him. You stop praying selfish prayers like “God bless what I want 
to do.” Instead you pray, “God help me to do what you’re 
blessing!” You hand God a blank sheet with your name signed at 
the bottom and tell him to fill in the details. The Bible says, “Give 
yourselves completely to God—every part of you ... to be tools in the 
hands of God, to be used for his good purposes .” 21 

If you will commit to fulfilling your mission in life no matter 
what it costs, you will experience the blessing of God in ways that 


-- - - 

It is easy to get distracted, 
because Satan would rather 
have you do anything 
besides sharing your faith. 

— - 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


286 



few people ever experience. There is almost nothing God won’t 
do for the man or woman who is committed to serving the 
kingdom of God. Jesus has promised, “[God] willgive you all you 
need from day to day if you live for him and make the Kingdom of 
God your primary concern.” 22 

One More for Jesus 

My father was a minister for over fifty years, serving rnosdy in 
small, rural churches. He was a simple preacher, but he was a man 
with a mission. His favorite activity was taking teams of volunteers 
overseas to build church buildings for small congregations. In his 
lifetime, Dad built over 150 churches around the world. 

In 1999, my father died of cancer. In the final week of his life 
the disease kept him awake in a semi-conscious state nearly 
twenty-four hours a day. As he dreamed, he’d talk out loud about 
what he was dreaming. Sitting by his bedside, I learned a lot 
about my dad by just listening to his dreams. He relived one 
church building project after another. 

One night near the end, while my wife, my niece, and I 
were by his side, Dad suddenly became very active 
and tried to get out of bed. Of course, he was too 
weak, and my wife insisted he lay back down. 

But he persisted in trying to get out of bed, so 
my wife finally asked, “Jimmy, what are you 
trying to do?” He replied, “Got to save one 
more for Jesus! Got to save one more for Jesus! 

Got to save one more for Jesus!” He began to repeat that 
phrase over and over. 

During the next hour, he said the phrase probably a hundred 
times. “Got to save one more for Jesus!” As I sat by his bed with 
tears flowing down my cheeks, I bowed my head to thank God 
for my dad’s faith. At that moment Dad reached out and placed 
his frail hand on my head and said, as if commissioning me, “Save 
one more for Jesus! Save one more for Jesus!” 



PURPOSE #5: You Were Made for a Mission 


287 


I intend for that to be the theme of the rest of my life. I invite 
yon to consider it as a focus for your life, too, because nothing will 
make a greater difference for eternity. If you want to be used by 
God, you must care about what God cares about; what he cares 
about most is the redemption of the people he made. He wants 
his lost children found! Nothing matters more to God; the Cross 
proves that. I pray that you will always be on the lookout to reach 
“one more for Jesus” so that when you stand before God one day, 
you can say, “Mission accomplished!” 


V40r- 


Day Thirty-six 
Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: I was made for a mission. 


Verse to Remember: “Go and make disciples of all 
nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of 
the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey 
everything I have commanded you. And surely 1 am with 
you always, to the very end of the age.” 

Matthew 28:19-20 (NIV) 


1 


■ 


i 


Question to Consider: What fears have kept me from 
fulfilling the mission God made me to accomplish? 

> What keeps me from telling others the Good News? 

_ 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


288 












Sharing Your Life Message 


Those who believe in the Son of God 
have the testimony of God in them. 
i John 5:10a (GWT) 

Tour lives are echoing the 

Master’s Word _ The news ofyour faith 

in God is out. We don’t even have to say 
anything anymore —you’re the message! 
i Thessalonians 1:8 (Msg) 


God has given you a Life Message to share. 

When you became a believer, you also became God’s 
messenger. God wants to speak to the world through you. Paul 
said, a We speak the truth before God, as messengers of God.” 1 

You may feel you don’t have anything to share, but that’s the 
Devil trying to keep you silent. You have a storehouse of 
experiences that God wants to use to bring others into his family. 
The Bible says, “Those who believe in the Son of God have the 
testimony of God in them.” 2 Your Life Message has four parts to it: 

• Your testimony: the story of how you began a relationship 
with Jesus 

• Your life lessons: the most important lessons God has taught 
you 


PURPOSE #5: You Were Made for a Mission 


289 


• Your godly passions: the issues God shaped you to care about 
most 

• The Good News: the message of salvation 

Your Life Message includes your testimony. Your testimony 
is the story of how Christ has made a difference in your life. Peter 
tells us that we were chosen by God “to do his work cind speak out 
for him, to tell others of the niyjht-and-day difference he made for 
you. This is the essence of witnessing—simply sharing your 
personal experiences regarding the Lord. In a courtroom, a 
witness isn’t expected to argue the case, prove the truth, or press 

for a verdict; that is the job of 
attorneys. Witnesses simply report 
what happened to them or what 
they saw. 

Jesus said, “Ton will be my 
witnesses, ” 4 not “You will be my 
attorney.” He wants you to share 
your story with others. Sharing 
your testimony is an essential part 
of your mission on earth because it is unique. There is no other 
story just like yours, so only you can share it. If you don’t share it, 
it will be lost forever. You may not be a Bible scholar, but you are 
the authority on your life, and it’s hard to argue with personal 
experience. Actually, your personal testimony is more effective 
than a sermon, because unbelievers see pastors as professional 
salesmen, but see you as a “satisfied customer,” so they give you 
more credibility. 

Personal stories are also easier to relate to than principles, and 
people love to hear them. They capture our attention, and we 
remember them longer. Unbelievers would probably lose interest if 
you started quoting theologians, but they have a natural curiosity 
about experiences they’ve never had. Shared stories build a relational 
bridge that Jesus can walk across from your heart to theirs. 


-— -- 

Shared stories build a relational 
bridge thatJesus can walk across 
from your heart to others. 




The Purpose-Driven Life 


290 



Another value of your testimony is that it bypasses intellectual 
defenses. Many people who won’t accept the authority of the 
Bible will listen to a humble, personal story. That 


is why on six different occasions Paul used his 
testimony to share the gospel instead of quoting 
Scripture. 5 


DAY THIRTY-SEVEN 


SHARING 
YOUR LIFE 
MESSAGE 


The Bible says, “Re ready at all times to answer 


anyone who asks you to explain the hope you have in 
you, but do it with gentleness and respect,” 6 The best way to “be 
ready” is to write out your testimony and then memorize the 
main points. Divide it into four parts: 

1. What my life was like before I met Jesus 

2. How I realized I needed Jesus 

3. How I committed my life to Jesus 

4. The difference Jesus has made in my life 

Of course, you have many other testimonies besides your 
salvation story. You have a story for every experience in which 
God has helped you. You should make a list of all the problems, 
circumstances, and crises that God has brought you through. 
Then be sensitive and use the story that your unbelieving friend 
will relate to best. Different situations call for different 
testimonies. 

Your Life Message includes your life lessons. The second 
part of your life message is the truths that God has taught you 
from experiences with him. These are lessons and insights you 
have learned about God, relationships, problems, temptations, 
and other aspects of life. David prayed, “God, teach me lessons for 
living so I can stay the course.” 7 Sadly, we never learn from a lot 
that happens to us. Of the Israelites, the Bible says, “Over and 
over God rescued them, but they never learned—until finally their 
sins destroyed them.”* You have probably met people like that. 

While it is wise to learn from experience, it is wiser to learn 
from the experiences of others. There isn’t enough time to learn 

PURPOSE #5: You Were Made for a Mission 291 


everything in life by trial and error. We must learn from the life 
lessons of one another. The Bible says, “A warning given by an 
experienced person to someone willing to listen is more valuable than 
... jewelry made of the finest gold.” 9 

Write down the major life lessons you have learned so you can 
share them with others. We should be grateful Solomon did 
this, because it gave us the books of Proverbs and Ecclesiastes, 

which are filled with practical 
lessons on living. Imagine how 
much needless frustration could be 
avoided if we learned from each 
other’s life lessons. 

Mature people develop the habit 
of extracting lessons from everyday 
experiences. I urge you to make a 
list of your life lessons. You haven’t really thought about them 
unless you have written them down. Here are a few questions to 
jog your memory and get your started: 10 

• What has God taught me from failure? 

• What has God taught me from a lack of money? 

• What has God taught me from pain or sorrow 
or depression? 

• What has God taught me through waiting? 

• What has God taught me through illness? 

• What has God taught me from disappointment? 

• What have I learned from my family, my church, my 
relationships, my small group, and my critics? 

Your Life Message includes sharing your godly passions. 

God is a passionate God. He passionately loves some things and 
passionately hates other things. As you grow closer to him, he will 
give you a passion for something he cares about deeply so you can 
be a spokesman for him in the world. It may be a passion about a 
problem, a purpose, a principle, or a group of people. Whatever it 


--- 

While it is wise to learn from 
experience, it is wiser to learn 
from the experiences of others. 

— - 


The Purpose'Driven Life 


292 



is, you will feel compelled to speak up about it and do what you 
can to make a difference. 

You cannot keep yourself from talking about what you care 
about most. Jesus said, “A man’s heart determines his speech.” 11 
Two examples are David, who said, “My zeal for God and his work 
burns hot within me,” 12 and Jeremiah, who said, “Tour message 
burns in my heart and bones, and I cannot keep silent.” 12 

God gives some people a godly passion to champion a cause. 
It’s often a problem they personally experienced such as ab>use, 
addiction, infertility, depression, a disease, or some other 
difficulty. Sometimes God gives people a passion to speak up for a 
group of others who can’t speak for themselves: the unborn, the 
persecuted, the poor, the imprisoned, the mistreated, the 
disadvantaged, and those who are denied justice. The Bible is 
filled with commands to defend the defenseless. 

God uses passionate people to further his kingdom. He may 
give you a godly passion for starting new churches, strengthening 
families, funding Bible translations, or training Christian leaders. 
You may be given a godly passion for reaching a particular group 
of people with the gospel: businessmen, teenagers, foreign 
exchange students, young mothers, or those with a particular 
hobby or sport. If you ask God, he 
will burden your heart for a specific 
country or ethnic group that 
desperately needs a strong Christian 
witness. 

God gives us different passions so 
that everything he wants done in 
the world will get done. You should 
not expect everyone else to be passionate about your passion. 
Instead, we must listen to and value each other’s life message 
because nobody can say it all. Never belittle someone else’s godly 
passion. The Bible says, “It is fine to be zealous, provided the 
purpose isgood.” li 


-. 

God fives us different passions 
so that everything he wants done 
in the world will get done. 


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293 



Your Life Message includes the Good News. What is the 

Good News? “The Good News shows how God makes people right 
with himself—that it begins and ends with faith.” 1 * “For God was in 
Christ, reconciling the world to himself no longer counting people’s 
sins against them. This is the wonderful message he has given us to tell 
others.” 16 The Good News is that when we trust God’s grace to 
save us through what Jesus did, our sins are forgiven, we get a 
purpose for living, and we are promised a future home in heaven. 

There are hundreds of great books on how to share the Good 
News. I can provide a list of books that have been helpful to me 
(see appendix 2). But all the training in the world won’t motivate 
you to witness for Christ until you internalize the eight 
convictions covered in the previous chapter. Most important, you 
must learn to love lost people the way God does. 

God has never made a person he didn’t love. Everybody 
matters to him. When Jesus stretched his arms out wide on the 
cross, he was saying, “I love you this much!” The Bible says, “For 
Christ’s love compels us, because we are convinced that one 
died for all.” 17 Whenever you feel apathetic about your 
mission in the world, spend some time thinking 
about what Jesus did for you on the cross. 

We must care about unbelievers because God 
does. Love leaves no choice. The Bible says, 

“There is no fear in love; perfect love drives out all 
fear” 18 A parent will run into a burning building to 
save a child because their love for that child is greater than their 
fear. If you’ve been afraid to share the Good News with those 
around you, ask God to fill your heart with his love for them. 

The Bible says, “[God] does not want anyone to be lost, but he 
wants all people to change their hearts and lives.” 19 As long as you 
know one person who doesn’t know Christ, you must keep 
praying for them, serving them in love, and sharing the Good 
News. And as long as there is one person in your community who 
isn’t in the family of God, your church must keep reaching out. 



The Purpose-Driven Life 


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The church that doesn’t want to grow is saying to the world, 

“You can go to hell.” 

What are you willing to do so that the people you know will go 
to heaven? Invite them to church? Share your story? Give them 
this book? Take them a meal? Pray for them every day until they 
are saved? Your mission field is all around you. Don’t miss the 
opportunities God is giving you. The Bible says, “Make the most of 
your chances to tell others the Good News. Be wise in all your contacts 
with them.” 2Q 

Is anyone going to be in heaven because of you? Will anyone in 
heaven be able to say to you, “I want to thank you. I’m here 
because you cared enough to share the Good News with me”? 
Imagine the joy of greeting people in heaven whom you helped 
get there. The eternal salvation of a single soul is more important 
than anything else you will ever achieve in life. Only people are 
going to last forever. 

In this book you have learned God’s five purposes for your life 
on earth: He made you to be a member of his family, a model of 
his character, a magnifier of his glory, a minister of his grace, and 
a messenger of his Good News to others. Of these five purposes, 
the fifth can only be done on earth. The other four you will keep 
doing in eternity in some way. That’s why spreading the Good 
News is so important; you only have a short time to share your 
life message and fulfill your mission. 


PURPOSE #5: You Were Made for a Mission 




- 


■ 


Day Thirty-seven 
Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: God wants to say something to the 
world through me. 

Verse to Remember: “Be ready at all times to answer 
anyone who asks you to explain the hope you have in you, 
but do it with gentleness and respect.” 

1 Peter 3:15b-16 (TEV) 

Question to Consider: As I reflect on my personal 
story, who does God want me to share it with? 

_____._- _ . -_ 


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Becoming a 
World-Class Christian 


Jesus said to his followers, 

“Go everywhere in the world, 
and tell the Good News to everyone 
Mark 16:15 (NCV) 

Send us around the world with 
the news of your saving power 
and your eternal plan for all mankind. 
Psalm 67:2 (LB) 


The Great Commission is your commission. 

You have a choice to make. You will be either a world-class 
Christian or a worldly Christian. 1 

Worldly Christians look to God primarily for personal 
fulfillment. They are saved, but self-centered. They love to attend 
concerts and enrichment seminars, but you would never find 
them at a missions conference because they aren’t interested. 
Their prayers focus on their own needs, blessings, and happiness. 
It’s a “me-first” faith: How can God make my life more 
comfortable? They want to use God for their purposes instead of 
being used for his purposes. 

In contrast, world-class Christians know they were saved to 
serve and made for a mission. They are eager to receive a personal 


PURPOSE #5: You Were Made for a Mission 


297 



assignment and excited about the privilege of being used by God. 
World-class Christians are the only fully alive people on the 
planet. Their joy, confidence, and enthusiasm are contagious 
because they know they’re making a difference. They wake up 
each morning expecting God to work through them in fresh 
ways. Which type of Christian do you want to be? 

God invites you to participate in the greatest, largest, most 
diverse, and most significant cause in history—his kingdom. 

History is his story. He’s building his family for eternity. 
Nothing matters more, and nothing will last as 
long. From the book of Revelation we know that 
God’s global mission will be accomplished. 
Someday the Great Commission will be the Great 
Completion. In heaven an enormous crowd of 
people from “every race, tribe, nation, and language” 2 
will one day stand before Jesus Christ to worship him. 
Getting involved as a world-class Christian will allow you to 
experience a little of what heaven will be like in advance. 

When Jesus told his followers to “go everywhere in the world, 
and tell the Good News to everyone,” that small band of poor, 
Middle Eastern disciples were overwhelmed. Were they supposed 
to walk or ride slow animals? That’s all they had for 
transportation, and there were no ocean-crossing ships, so there 
were real physical barriers to going to the whole world. 

Today we have airplanes, ships, trains, buses, and automobiles. 
It’s a small world after all, and it’s shrinking daily. You can fly 
across the ocean in a matter of hours and be home the next day if 
you need to be. The opportunities for normal, everyday 
Christians to become involved in short-term international 
missions are now literally limitless. Every corner of the world is 
available to you—just ask the travel industry. We have no excuse 
not to spread the Good News. 

Now, with the Internet, the world has gotten even smaller. In 
addition to phones and faxes, any believer with Internet access 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


298 


can personally communicate with people in virtually every 
country on earth. The whole world is at your fingertips! 

Even many remote villages get email, so you can now carry on 
“e-vangelistic” conversations with people on the other side of the 
world, without even leaving your home! It has never been easier 
in history to fulfill your commission to go to the whole world. 

The great barriers are no longer distance, cost, or transportation. 
The only barrier is the way we think. To be a world-class Christian 
you must make some mental shifts. Your perspective and attitudes 
must change. 

How to Think Like a World-Class Christian 

Shift from self-centered thinking to other-centered 
thinking. The Bible says, “My friends, stop thinking like children. 
Think like mature people.”* This is the first step to becoming a 
world-class Christian. Children only think of themselves; grown¬ 
ups think of others. God commands, “Don’t think only about your 
own affairs, but be interested in others, too.” 4 

Of course, this is a difficult mental shift because we’re naturally 
self-absorbed and almost all advertising encourages us to think of 
ourselves. The only way we can 
make this paradigm switch is by a 
moment-by-moment dependence 
on God. Fortunately he doesn’t 
leave us to struggle on our own. 

“God has given us his Spirit. That’s 
why we don’t think the same way that 
the people of this world think.’”* 

Begin asking the Holy Spirit to 
help you to think of the spiritual need of unbelievers whenever 
you talk to them. With practice you can develop the habit of 
praying silent “breath prayers” for those you encounter. Say, 
“Father, help me to understand what is keeping this person from 
knowing you.” 


It has never been easier 
in history to fulfill 
your commission to go 
to the whole world. 

— - 


PURPOSE #5: You Were Made for a Mission 


299 



Your goal is to figure out where others are in their spiritual 
journey and then do whatever will bring them a step closer to 
knowing Christ. You can learn how to do this by adopting the 
mind-set of Paul, who said, “I don’t think about what would be 
good for me but about what would be good for many people so that 
they might be saved.” 6 

Shift from local thinldng to global thinking. God is a global 
God. He has always cared about the entire world. “God so loved 
the world.... ” 7 From the beginning he has wanted family 
members from every nation he created. The Bible says, “From one 
person God made all nations who live on earth, and he decided when 
and where every nation would be. God has done all this, so that we 
will look for him and reach out and find him.” & 

Much of the world already thinks globally. The largest media 
and business conglomerates are all multinational. Our lives are 
increasingly intertwined with those in other nations as we share 
fashions, entertainment, music, sports, and even fast food. 

Probably most of the clothes you are wearing and 
much of what you ate today were produced in 
another country. We are more connected than we 
realize. 

These are exciting days to be alive. There are 
more Christians on earth right now than ever 
before. Paul was right: “This same Good News that 
came to you is going out all over the world. It is changing lives 
everywhere, just as it changed yours.” 9 

The first way to start thinking globally is to begin praying for 
specific countries. World-class Christians pray for the world. Get a 
globe or map and pray for nations by name. The Bible says, “If 
you ask me, I will give you the nations; all the people on earth will be 
yours.” 10 

Prayer is the most important tool for your mission in the world. 
People may refuse our love or reject our message, but they are 
defenseless against our prayers. Like an intercontinental missile, 


DAY THIRTY-EIGHT: 

BECOMING 
A WORLD- 
CLASS 
CHRISTIAN 


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300 


you can aim a prayer at a person’s heart whether you are ten feet 
or 10,000 miles away. 

What should you pray for? The Bible tells us to pray for 
opportunities to witness, 11 for courage to speak up, 12 for those 
who will believe, 13 for the rapid spread of the message, 14 and 
for more workers. 15 Prayer makes 
you a partner with others around 
the world. 

You should also pray for 
missionaries and everyone else 
involved in the global harvest. Paul 
told his prayer partners, “You are 
also joining to help us when you pray 
for us. ” 16 If you would like 
suggestions for praying intelligently for the world and Christian 
workers, see appendix 2 . 

Another way to develop global thinking is to read and watch 
the news with “Great Commission eyes. ” Wherever there is change 
or conflict, you can be sure that God will use it to bring people to 
him. People are most receptive to God when they are under 
tension or in transition. Because the rate of change is increasing in 
our world, more people are open to hearing the Good News now 
than ever before. 

The best way to switch to global thinking is to just get up and 
go on a short-term mission project to another country! There’s 
simply no substitute for hands-on, real life experience in another 
culture. Quit studying and discussing your mission and just do it! 

I dare you to dive into the deep end. In Acts 1:8 Jesus gave us a 
pattern for involvement: “You will tell everyone about me in 
Jerusalem, in all Judea, in Samaria, and everywhere in the 
world.” 17 His followers were to reach out to their community 
(Jerusalem), to their country (Judea), to other cultures (Samaria), 
and to other nations (everywhere in the world). Note that our 
commission is simultaneous, not sequential. While not everyone 


People may refuse our love 
or reject our message, 
but they are defenseless 
against our prayers. 

■ — - 


PURPOSE #5: You Were Made for a Mission 


301 



has the missionary gift, every Christian is called to be on a mission 
to all four groups in some way. Are you an Acts 1:8 Christian? 

Set a goal to participate in a mission project to each of these 
four targets. I urge you to save and do whatever it takes to 
participate in a short-term mission trip overseas as soon as possible. 
Nearly every mission agency can help you do this. It will enlarge 
your heart, expand your vision, stretch your faith, deepen your 
compassion, and fill you with a kind of joy you have never 
experienced. It could be the turning point in your life. 

Shift from “here and now” thinking to eternal thinldng. To 
make the most of your time on earth, you must maintain an eternal 
perspective. This will keep you from majoring on minor issues and 
help you distinguish between what’s urgent and what’s ultimate. 
Paul said, “We fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen. 
For what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal T 18 

So much of what we waste our energy on will not matter even a 
year from now, much less for eternity. Don’t trade your life for 
temporary things. Jesus said, “Anyone who lets himself be distracted 
from the work I plan for him is not fit for the Kingdom of God.” 19 
Paul warned, “Deal as sparingly as possible with the things the world 
thrusts on you. This world as you see it is on its way out.” 20 

What are you allowing to stand in the way of your mission? 
What’s keeping you from being a world-class Christian? Whatever 
_ it is, let it go. “Let us strip off 

anything that slows us down or holds 


“You can’t take it with you”— 
hut the Bible says you can 
send it on ahead by investing 
in people who are going there! 


■ 


us back.” 21 

Jesus told us to “store up your 
treasures in heaven.” 22 How can we 
do this? In one of his most 
misunderstood statements Jesus 
said, “I tell you, use worldly wealth to 
gain friends for yourselves, so that 


when it is gone, you will be welcomed into eternal dwellings.” 22 Jesus 
did not mean for you to “buy” friends with money. What he 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


302 



meant was that you should use the money God gives you to bring 
people to Christ. They will then be friends for eternity who will 
welcome you when you get to heaven! It’s the best financial 
investment you’ll ever make. 

You’ve probably heard the expression “You can’t take it with 
you”—but the Bible says you can send it on ahead by investing in 
people who are going there! The Bible says, “By doing this they 
will be storing up real treasure for themselves in heaven—it is the 
only safe investment for eternity! And they will be living a fruitful 
Christian life down here as well. 

Shift from thinldng of excuses to thinking of creative ways 
to fulfill your commission. If you are willing, there is always a 
way to do it, and there are agencies that will help you. Here are 
some common excuses: 

• “I only speak English. ” This is actually an advantage in many 
countries where millions of people want to learn English and 
are eager to practice it. 

• “I don’t have anything to offer.” Yes, you do. Every ability 
and experience in your shape can be used somewhere. 

• “I’m too old (or too young) .”Most mission agencies have 
age-appropriate short term projects. 

Whether it was Sarah claiming she was too old to be used by 
God or Jeremiah claiming he was too young, God rejected their 
excuses. “‘Don’t say that,’the Lord replied, for you must go 
wherever I send you and say whatever I tell you. And don’t be afraid 
of the people, for I will be with you and take care ofyou.’” 2i 

Maybe you have believed that you needed a special “call” from 
God, and you’ve been waiting for some supernatural feeling or 
experience. But God has already stated his call repeatedly. We are 
all called to fulfill God’s five purposes for our lives: to worship, to 
fellowship, to grow like Christ, to serve, and to be on mission 
with God in the world. God doesn’t want to use just some of his 
people; he wants to use all of his people. We are all called to be 


PURPOSE #5: You Were Made for a Mission 


303 


on-mission for God. He wants his whole church to take the whole 
gospel to the whole world. 26 

Many Christians have missed God’s plan for their lives because 
they have never even asked God if he wanted them to serve as a 
missionary somewhere. Whether out of fear or ignorance, they 
have automatically closed their minds to the possibility of serving 
as a resident missionary in a cross-cultural location. If you are 
tempted to say no, you ought to check out all the different ways 
and possibilities that are now available (this will surprise you), and 
you ought to seriously pray and ask God what he wants from you 
in the years ahead. Untold thousands of resident missionaries are 
desperately needed at this critical point in history, when so many 
doors are opening wide like never before. 

If you want to be like Jesus, you must have a heart for the 
whole world. You can’t be satisfied with just your family and 
friends coming to Christ. There are over 6 billion people on 
earth, and Jesus wants all his lost children found. Jesus said, 

“Only those who throw away their lives for my sake and for the sake of 
the Good News will ever know what it means to really live!” 27 The 
Great Commission is your commission, and doing your part is the 
secret to living a life of significance. 


Day Thirty-eight 
Thinking about My Purpose 
Point to Ponder: The Great Commission is my 
commission. 

Verse to Remember: “Send us around the world with the 
news of your saving power and your eternal plan for all 
mankind.” Psalm 67:2 (LB) 

Question to Consider: What steps can I take to prepare 
to go on a short-term missions experience in the next year? 
■ — __ ___ 


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304 










Balancing Your Life 

Live life with a due sense of responsibility, 
not as those who do not know 
the meaning of life but as those who do. 
Ephesians 5:15 (Ph) 

Don’t let the errors of evil people 
lead you down the wrong path 
and make you lose your balance. 

2 Peter 3:17 (CEV) 


Blessed are the balanced; they shall outlast everyone. 

One of the events in the summer Olympics is the pentathlon. It 
is composed of five events: pistol shooting, fencing, horseback 
riding, running, and swimming. The pentathlete’s goal is to 
succeed in all five areas, not just one or two. 

Your life is a pentathlon of five purposes, which you must keep 
in balance. These purposes were practiced by the first Christians 
in Acts 2, explained by Paul in Ephesians 4, and modeled by Jesus 
in John 17, but they are summarized in the Great Commandment 
and the Great Commission of Jesus. These two statements sum 
up what this book is all about—God’s five purposes for your life: 


PURPOSE #5: You Were Made for a Mission 


305 


1. “Love God with all your heart”: You were planned for 
God’s pleasure, so your purpose is to love God through 
worship. 

2. “Love your neighbor as yourself”: You were shaped for 
serving, so your purpose is to show love for others through 
ministry. 

3. “Go and make disciples”: You were made for a mission, so 
your purpose is to share God’s message through evangelism. 

4. “baptize them into ..You were formed for God’s 
family, so your purpose is to identify with his church 
through fellowship. 

5. “teach them to do all things ..You were created to 
become like Christ, so your purpose is to grow to maturity 
through discipleship. 

A great commitment to the Great Commandment and the 
Great Commission will make you a great Christian. 

Keeping these five purposes in balance is not easy. We all tend 
to overemphasize the purposes we feel most passionate about and 
neglect the others. Churches do the same thing. But you can keep 
your life balanced and on track by joining a small group for 
accountability, by regularly evaluating your spiritual health, by 

recording your progress in a 
personal journal, and by passing on 
what you learn to others. These are 
four important activities for 
purpose-driven living. If you are 
serious about staying on track, you 
will need to develop these habits. 

Talk it through with a spiritual 
partner or small group. The best 
way to internalize the principles in this book is to discuss them 
with others in a small-group setting. The Bible says, “As iron 
sharpens iron, so people can improve each other.” 1 We learn best in 


-_-- 

A great commitment to 
the Great Commandment and 
the Great Commission will 
make you a great Christian. 

— - 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


30 6 



community. Our minds are sharpened and our convictions are 
deepened through conversation. 

I strongly urge you to gather a small group of friends and form 
a Purpose-Driven Life Reading Group to review these chapters on 
a weekly basis. Discuss the implications and the applications of 
each chapter. Ask “So what?” and “What now?” What 
does this mean for me, my family, and our church? 

What am I going to do about it? Paul said, “Put 
into practice what you learned ” 2 In appendix 1, 

I have prepared a list of discussion questions for 
your small group or Sunday school class to use. 

A small reading group provides many benefits that 
a book by itself cannot. You can give and receive feedback about 
what you’re learning. You can discuss real-life examples. You can 
pray for, encourage, and support each other as you begin to live 
out these purposes. Remember, we are meant to grow together, 
not separately. The Bible says, “Encourage each other and give each 
other strength.” 2 After you have gone through this book together 
as a group, you might consider studying other purpose-driven life 
studies that are available for classes and groups (see appendix 2). 

I also encourage you to do personal Bible study. I have 
footnoted over a thousand Scriptures used in this book for you to 
study in their context. Please read appendix 3, which explains why 
this book uses so many different translations and paraphrases. To 
keep these chapters to a size for daily reading, I was unable to 
explain the fascinating context of most of the verses used. But the 
Bible is intended to be studied by paragraphs, chapters, and even 
entire books. My book Personal Bible Study Methods can show you 
how to do inductive studies. 

Give yourself a regular spiritual check-up. The best way to 
balance the five purposes in your life is to evaluate yourself 
periodically. God places a high value on the habit of self- 
evaluation. At least five times in Scripture we are told to test and 
examine our own spiritual health. 4 The Bible says, “Testyourselves 

PURPOSE #5: You Were Made for a Mission 307 



to make sure you are solid in the faith. Don’t drift along taking 
everything for granted. Give yourselves regular checkups.... Test it 
out. If you fail the test, do something about it.” 1 ' 

To maintain your physical health, you need regular check-ups 
with a doctor who can assess your vital signs—blood pressure, 
temperature, weight, and so on. For your spiritual health you 
need to regularly check the five vital signs of worship, fellowship, 
growth in character, ministry, and mission. Jeremiah advised, 

“Let’s take a good look at the way we’re living and 
daythirty-nine: reorder our lives under God.” 6 

BALANCING At Saddleback Church we have developed a 
YOUR LIFE simple personal evaluation tool that has helped 
thousands of people stay on-purpose for God. If 
you would like a copy of this purpose-driven life spiritual health 
assessment, you can email me (see appendix 2). You will be 
amazed at how much this little tool will help you balance your life 
for health and growth. Paul urged, “Letyour enthusiastic idea at 
the start be equaled by your realistic action now.” 1 

Write down your progress in a journal. The best way to 
reinforce your progress in fulfilling God’s purposes for your life is 
to keep a spiritual journal. This is not a diary of events, but a 
record of the life lessons you don’t want to forget. The Bible says, 
“It’s crucial that we keep a firm grip on what we’ve heard so that we 
don’t drift off.” 8 We remember what we record. 

Writing helps clarify what God is doing in your life. Dawson 
Trotman used to say, “Thoughts disentangle themselves when 
they pass through your fingertips.” The Bible has several examples 
of God telling people to keep a spiritual journal. It says, “At the 
Lord’s direction, Moses kept a written record of their progress.” 9 
Aren’t you glad Moses obeyed God’s command to record Israel’s 
spiritual journey? If he had been lazy, we would be robbed of the 
powerful life lessons of the Exodus. 

While it’s unlikely that your spiritual journal will be as widely 
read as Moses’ was, yours is still important. The New 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


308 


International Version says, “Moses recorded the stages in their 
journey. ” Your life is a journey, and a journey deserves a journal. I 
hope you will write about the stages of your spiritual journey in 
living a purpose-driven life. 

Don’t just write down the pleasant things. As David did, record 
your doubts, fears, and struggles with God. Our greatest lessons 
come out of pain, and the Bible says God keeps a record of our 
tears. 10 Whenever problems occur, remember that God uses them 
to fulfill all five purposes in your life: Problems force you to focus 
on God, draw you closer to others in fellowship, build Christlike 
character, provide you with a ministry, and give you a testimony. 
Every problem is purpose-driven. 

In the middle of a painful experience, the psalmist wrote, 

“Write down for the coming generation what the Lord has done, so 
that people not yet born will praise him A 11 You owe it to future 
generations to preserve the testimony of how God helped you 
fulfill his purposes on earth. It is a witness that will continue to 
speak long after you’re in heaven. 

Pass on what you know to others. If you want to keep 
growing, the best way to learn more is to pass on what you have 
already learned. Proverbs tells us, “The one who blesses others is 
abundantly blessed; those who help others are helped.” 12 Those who 
pass along insights get more from God. 

Now that you understand the purpose of life, it is your 
responsibility to carry the message to others. God is calling you to 
be his messenger. Paul said, “Now I 
want you to tell these same things to 
followers who can be trusted to tell 
others.” 12 In this book I have passed 
on to you what others taught me 
about the purpose of life; now it’s 
your duty to pass that on to others. 

You probably know hundreds of 
people who do not know the - ■ - 


— NI&2. --- 

You owe it to future generations 
to preserve the testimony 
of how God helped you fulfill 
his purposes on earth. 


PURPOSE #5: You Were Made for a Mission 


309 



purpose of life. Share these truths with your children, your 
friends, your neighbors, and those you work with. If you give this 
book to a friend, add your personal note on the dedication page. 

The more you know, the more God expects you to use that 
knowledge to help others. James said, a Anyone who knows the right 
thing to do, but does not do it, is sinning ” li Knowledge increases 
responsibility. But passing along the purpose of life is more than 
an obligation; it’s one of life’s greatest privileges. Imagine how 
different the world would be if everyone knew their purpose. Paul 
said, “Ifyou teach these things to other followers, you will be a good 
servant of Christ Jesus. ” 15 


It’s All for God’s Glory 

The reason we pass on what we learn is for the glory of God 
and the growth of his kingdom. The night before he was 
crucified, Jesus reported to his Father, “I have brought you glory on 
earth by completing the work you gave me to do. Vlb When Jesus 

prayed these words, he had not yet died for our sins, so 
what “work” had he completed? In this instance he 
was referring to something other than the 
atonement. The answer lies in what he said in the 
next twenty verses of his prayer . 17 

Jesus told his Father what he had been doing 
for the last three years: preparing his disciples to 
live for God’s purposes. Fie helped them to know and 
love God (worship), taught them to love each other (fellowship), 
gave them the Word so they could grow to maturity 
(discipleship), showed them how to serve (ministry), and sent 
them out to tell others (mission). Jesus modeled a purpose-driven 
life, and he taught others how to live it, too. That was the “work” 
that brought glory to God. 

Today God calls each of us to the same work. Not only does he 
want us to live out his purposes, he also wants us to help others 
do the same. God wants us to introduce people to Christ, bring 



The Purpose-Driven Life 


310 


them into his fellowship, help them grow to maturity and 
discover their place of service, and then send them out to reach 
others, too. 

This is what purpose-driven living is all about. Regardless of 
your age, the rest of your life can be the best of your life, and you 
can start living on purpose today. 




Day Thirty-nine 
Thinking about My Purpose 

Point to Ponder: Blessed are the balanced. 

Verse to Remember: “Live life with a due sense of 
responsibility, not as those who do not know the meaning of 
life but as those who do.” Ephesians 5:15 (Ph) 

Question to Consider: Which of the four activities will 
I begin in order to stay on track and balance God’s five 
purposes for my life? 

___- —- 


PURPOSE #5: You Were Made for a Mission 


3ii 








Living with Purpose 


Many are the plans in a man’s heart, 
hut it is the Lord’s purpose that prevails. 
Proverbs 19:21 (NIV) 

For David... served the purpose of God 
in his own generation. 

Acts 1336 (NASB) 


Living on purpose is the only way to really live. Everything else 
is just existing. 

Most people struggle with three basic issues in life. The first is 
identity: “Who am I?” The second is importance: “Do I matter?” 
The third is impact: “What is my place in life?” The answers to all 
three questions are found in God’s five purposes for you. 

In the Upper Room, as Jesus was concluding his last day of 
ministry with his disciples, he washed their feet as an example and 
said, “Now that you know these things, you will be blessed if you do 
them.” 1 Once you know what God wants you to do, the blessing 
comes in actually doing it. As we come to the end of our forty- 
day journey together, now that you know God’s purposes for your 
life, you will be blessed if you do them! 

This probably means you will have to stop doing some other 
things. There are many “good” things you can do with your life, 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


312 


but God’s purposes are the five essentials you must do. 
Unfortunately, it’s easy to get distracted and forget what is most 
important. It’s easy to drift away from what matters most and 
slowly get off course. To prevent this, you should develop a 
purpose statement for your fife and then review it regularly. 


What Is a Life Purpose Statement? 

It’s a statement that summarizes God’s purposes for your 
life. In your own words you affirm your commitment to God’s 
five purposes for your life. A purpose statement is not a list of 
goals. Goals are temporary; purposes are eternal. The Bible says, 
“His plans endure forever; his purposes last eternally.” 2 

It’s a statement that points the direction of your life. 
Writing down your purposes on paper will force you to think 
specifically about the path of your life. The Bible says, “Know 
where you are headed, and you will stay on solid ground.” 2 A life 
purpose statement not only spells out what you intend to do with 
your time, life, and money, but also implies what you aren’t going 
to do. Proverbs says, “An intelligent person aims at wise action, 
but a fool starts off in many directions. ” 4 

It’s a statement that defines “success” for you. It states what 
you believe is important, not what the world says is important. It 
clarifies your values. Paul said, “I want you to understand what 
really matters.” 2 

It’s a statement that clarifies your roles. You will 

have different roles at different stages in life, but 
your purposes will never change. They are greater 
than any role you will have. 

It’s a statement that expresses your shape. 

It reflects the unique ways God made you to 
serve him. 

Take your time writing out your life purpose statement. Don’t 
try to complete it in a single setting, and don’t aim for perfection 
in your first draft; just write down your thoughts as fast as they 



PURPOSE #5: You Were Made for a Mission 


313 


come to you. It is always easier to edit than to create. Here are 
five questions you should consider as you prepare your statement: 

Life’s Five Greatest Questions 

What will be the center of my life? This is the question of 
worship. Who are you going to live for? What are you going to 
build your life around? You can center your life around your career, 
your family, a sport or hobby, money, having fun, or many other 
activities. These are all good things, but they don’t belong at the 
center of your life. None is strong enough to hold you together 
when life starts breaking apart. You need an unshakable center. 

King Asa told the people of Judah to “center their lives in 
God. ” 6 Actually, whatever is at the center of your life is your god. 
When you committed your life to Christ, he moved into the 

center, but you must keep him 
there through worship. Paul says, “I 
pray that Christ will be more and 
more at home in your hearts.” 7 

How do you know when God is 
at the center of your life? When 
God’s at the center, you worship. 
When he’s not, you worry. Worry is 
the warning light that God has been shoved to the sideline. The 
moment you put him back at the center, you will have peace 
again. The Bible says, “A sense of God's wholeness ... will come and 
settle you down. It's wonderful what happens when Christ displaces 
worry at the center of your life.”* 

What will be the character of my life? This is the question of 
discipleship. What kind of person will you be? God is far more 
interested in what you are than what you do. Remember, you will 
take your character into eternity, but not your career. Make a list 
of the character qualities you want to work on and develop in 
your life. You might begin with the fruit of the Spirit 9 or the 
Beatitudes. 10 


--—. 

When God’s at the center 
of your life, you worship. 
When he’s not, you worry. 

— - 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


3i4 



Peter said., “Don’t lose a minute in building on what you’ve been 
given, complementing your basic faith with good character, spiritual 
understanding, alert discipline, passionate patience, reverent 
wonder, warm friendliness, and generous love.” 11 Don’t get 
discouraged and give up when you stumble. It takes a 
lifetime to build Christlike character. Paul told 
Timothy, a Keep a firm grasp on both your character 
and your teaching. Don’t be diverted. Just keep at it.” 12 

What will be the contribution of my life? This is 
the question of service. What will be your ministry in 
the Body of Christ? Knowing your combination of 
spiritual gifts, heart, abilities, personality, and experiences 
(SHAPE), what would be your best role in the family of God? 
How can you make a difference? Is there a specific group in the 
Body that I am shaped to serve? Paul pointed out two wonderful 
benefits when you fulfill your ministry: “This service you perform 
not only meets the needs of God’s people, but also produces an 
outpouring of gratitude to God.” 12 

While you are shaped to serve others, even Jesus didn’t meet 
the needs of everyone while on earth. You have to choose whom 
you can best help, based on your shape. You need to ask, “Who 
do I have a desire to help most?” Jesus said, “I commissioned you 
to go out and to bear fruit, fruit that will last.” 14 Each of us bears 
different fruit. 

What will be the communication of my life? This is the 
question of your mission to unbelievers. Your mission statement is 
a part of your life purpose statement. It should include your 
commitment to share your testimony and the Good News with 
others. You should also list the life lessons and godly passions you 
feel God has given you to share with the world. As you grow in 
Christ, God may give you a special target group of people to 
focus on reaching. Be sure to add this to your statement. 

If you are a parent, part of your mission is to raise your 
children to know Christ, to help them understand his purposes 


DAY FORTY: 

LIVING 

WITH 

PURPOSE 


PURPOSE #5: You Were Made for a Mission 


315 


for their lives, and to send them out on their mission in the 
world. You might include Joshua’s statement in yours: “As for me 
and my family, we will serve the Lord.” 15 

Of course, our lives must support and validate the message we 
communicate. Before most unbelievers accept the Bible as 
credible they want to know that we are credible. That is why the 
Bible says. “Be sure that you live in a way that brings honor to the 
Good News of Christ.” 16 

What will be the community of my life? This is the question 
of fellowship. How will you demonstrate your commitment to 
other believers and connection to the family of God? Where will 
you practice the “one another” commands with other Christians? 
To which church family will you be joined as a functioning 
member? The more you mature, the more you will love the Body 
of Christ and want to sacrifice for it. The Bible says, “Christ loved 
the church and gave his life for it.” 17 You should include an 
expression of your love for God’s church in your statement. 

As you consider your answers to these questions, include any 
Scriptures that speak to you about each of these purposes. There 
are many in this book. It may take you weeks or months to craft 
your life purpose statement just the way you want it. Pray, think 
about it, talk with close friends, and reflect on Scripture. You may 

go through several rewrites before 
you get to your final form. Even 
then, you will probably make minor 
changes as time goes by and God 
gives you more insight into your 
own shape. If you would like to see 
some examples from other people, 
just email me (see appendix 2). 

In addition to writing a detailed life purpose statement, it is 
also helpful to have a shorter statement or slogan that summarizes 
the five purposes for your life in a way that’s memorable and 
inspires you. Then you can remind yourself daily. Solomon 


-- XJ&TZ, - 

Before most unbelievers accept 
the Bible as credible they want 
to know that we are credible. 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


316 



advised, “It will be good to keep these things in mind so that you are 
ready to repeat them.” 1 * Here are a few examples: 

• “My life purpose is to worship Christ with my heart, serve 
him with my shape, fellowship with his family, grow like him 
in character, and fulfill his mission in the world so he receives 
glory.” 

• “My life purpose is to be a member of Christ’s family, a 
model of his character, a minister of his grace, a messenger 
of his word, and a magnifier of his glory.” 

• “My life purpose is to love Christ, grow in Christ, share 
Christ, and serve Christ through his church, and to lead my 
family and others to do the same. 

• “My life purpose is to make a great commitment to the 
Great Commandment and the Great Commission.” 

• “My goal is Christlikeness; my family is the church; my 

ministry is_; my mission is_; 

my motive is the glory of God.” 

You may wonder, “What about God’s will for my job or 
marriage or where I’m supposed to live or go to school?” 
Honestly, these are secondary issues in your life, and there may be 
multiple possibilities that would all be in God’s will for you. What 
matters most is that you fulfill God’s eternal purposes regardless 
of where you live or work or whom you marry. Those decisions 
should support your purposes. The Bible says, “Many are the 
plans in a man’s heart, but it is the Lord’s purpose that prevails.” 19 
Focus on God’s purposes for your life, not your plans, since that’s 
what will last forever. 

I once heard the suggestion that you develop your life 
purpose statement based on what you would like other people 
to say about you at your funeral. Imagine your perfect eulogy, 
then build your statement on that. Frankly, that’s a bad plan. At 
the end of your life it isn’t going to matter at all what other 
people say about you. The only thing that will matter is what 


PURPOSE #5: Tom Were Made for a Mission 


317 




God says about you. The Bible says, “Our purpose is to please God, 
not people.” 20 

One day God will review your answers to these life questions. 
Did you put Jesus at the center of your life? Did you develop his 
character? Did you devote your life to serving others? Did you 
communicate Inis message and fulfill his mission? Did you love and 
participate in his family? These are the only issues that will count. 
As Paul said, “Our goal is to measure up to God’s plan for us.” 21 

God Wants to Use You 

About thirty years ago, I noticed a little phrase in Acts 13:36 
that forever altered the direction of my life. It was only seven 
words but, like the stamp of a searing hot branding iron, my life 
was permanently marked by these words: “David served God’s 
purpose in his generation.” 22 Now I understood why God called 
David “a man after my own heart.” 22 David dedicated his life to 
fulfilling God’s purposes on earth. 

There is no greater epitaph than that statement! Imagine it 
chiseled on your tombstone: That you served God’s purpose in your 
generation. My prayer is tiiat people will be able to say that about 
me when I die. It is also my prayer that people will say it 
about you, too. That is why I wrote this book for you. 
This phrase is the ultimate definition of a life 
well lived. You do the eternal and timeless (God’s 
purpose) in a contemporary and timely way (in 
your generation). That is what the purpose-driven 
life is all about. Neither past nor future generations 
can serve God’s purpose in this generation. Only we can. 
Like Esther, God created you “for such a time as this.” 2A 

God is still looking for people to use. The Bible says, “The eyes 
of the Lord search the whole earth in order to strengthen those whose 
hearts are fully committed to him.” 22 Will you be a person God can 
use for his purposes? Will you serve God’s purpose in your 
generation? 



The Purpose-Driven Life 


3i8 


Paul lived a purpose-driven life. He said, “I run straight to the goal 
with purpose in every step. ” 2< ’ His only reason for living was to ful fi ll 
the purposes God had for him. He said, “ For to me, to live is Christ 
and to die is gain.” 27 Paul was not afraid of either living or dying. 
Either way, he would fu lfi ll God’s puiposes. He couldn’t lose! 

One day history will come to a 
close, but eternity will go on 
forever. William Carey said, “The 
future is as bright as the promises of 
God.” When fulfilling your 
purposes seems tough, don’t give in 
to discouragement. Remember your 
reward, which will last forever. The Bible says, “For our light and 
momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far 
outweighs them all. ” 28 

Imagine what it is going to be like one day, with all of us 
standing before the throne of God presenting our lives in deep 
gratitude and praise to Christ. Together we will say, “Worthy, Oh 
Master! Tes, our God! Take the glory! the honor! the power! Tou 
created it all; It was created because you wanted it!” 29 We will 
praise him for his plan and live for his purposes forever! 


You can start living 
on purpose today. 

— - 


-- — --- -| 

Day Forty 

Thinking about My Purpose 

1 

Point to Ponder: Living with purpose is the only way 
to really live. 

] 

Verse to Remember: “For David ... served the purpose 
of God in his own generation.” Acts 13:36 (NASB) 

I 

Question to Consider: When will I take the time to 
write down my answers to life’s five great questions? 

^ When will I put my purpose on paper? 

---—--- 


PURPOSE #5: You Were Made for a Mission 


319 













Appendix I: 
DISCUSSION 
QJJ ESTIONS 


In addition to the questions at the end of each chapter, you can use 
these discussion questions in your small group or Sunday school class 
setting. 

What on Earth Am I Here For? 

• What do you think are implications of the first sentence of this 
book, “It’s not about you”? 

• What do you feel most people’s lives are driven by? What has been 
the driving force in your life? 

• Up to this point, what image or metaphor has best described your 
life? A race, a circus, something else? 

• If everyone understood that life on earth is really preparation for 
eternity, how would we act differently? 

• What do people get attached to on earth that keeps them from 
living for God’s purposes? 

• What have you been attached to that could keep you from living 
for God’s purposes? 

You Were Planned for God’s Pleasure 

• How is “living your whole life for God’s pleasure” different front the 
way most people understand “worship”? 

• How is a friendship with God similar to any other friendship, and 
how is it different? 

• Share something you learned from a time when God seemed 
distant. 

• Which is easier for you—public or private worship? In which do 
you usually feel closer to God? 

• When is it appropriate to express anger to God? 

• What fears surface when you think of surrendering your complete 
life to Christ? 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


320 


You Were Formed for God’s Family 

• How is “being as committed to each other as we are to Jesus Christ” 
different from the way most people understand “fellowship”? 

• What are the barriers that keep us from loving and caring for other 
believers? 

• What would make it easier for you to be able to share your needs, 
hurts, fears, and hopes with others? 

• What are the most common excuses people give for not joining a 
church, and how would you answer them? 

• What could our group do to protect and promote the unity in our 
church? 

• Is there someone you need to restore a relationship with that we 
could pray for you about? 

You Were Created to Be Become Like Christ 

• How is “becoming like Jesus Christ” different from the way most 
people understand “discipleship”? 

• What are some of the changes you have seen in your life since you 
became a believer? What have others noticed? 

• A year from now, how would you like to be more Christlike? What 
can you do today to move toward that goal? 

• Where in your spiritual growth are you having to be patient 
because there seems to be little progress? 

• How has God used pain or trouble to help you grow? 

• When are you most vulnerable to temptation? Which of the steps 
to defeating temptation could help you most? 

You Were Shaped for Serving God 

• How is “using your shape to serve others” different from the way 
most people understand “ministry”? 

• What do you love to do that you could use to serve others in the 
family of God? 

• Think of a painful experience you have gone through that God 
could use to help others who are going through the same land of 
situation. 


Appendix i: Discussion Questions 


321 


• How does comparing ourselves with others keep us from fully 
developing our unique shape? 

• How have you seen God’s power demonstrated through you when 
you felt weak? 

• How can we help every member of our small group or class find a 
place of ministry? What can our group do to serve our church 
family? 

You Were Made for a Mission 

• What are some typical fears and stereotypes that people have when 
they hear the word “evangelism”? What keeps you from sharing 
the Good News with others? 

• What do you feel might be a part of the Life Message that God 
has given you to share with the world? 

• Share the name of a unbelieving friend that everyone in your 
group can begin praying for. 

• What can our group do together to help fulfill the Great 
Commission? 

• How has reading through this book together refocused or 
redirected your life purpose? What have been some of the most 
helpful insights to you? 

• Who does God bring to mind that you could share the life- 
changing message of this book with? 

• What are we going to study next? (See appendix 2 for 
suggestions.) 

Email us the story of your group: stories@purposedrivenlife.com 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


322 


Appendix 2: 
RESOURCES 


Resources for the Purpose-Driven® Life 

At your bookstore or www.purposedrivenlife.com: 

1. The Purpose-Driven ® Life Journal. The companion to this book. 

(Zondervan/Inspirio) 

2. The Purpose-Driven® Life Scripture Keepers Plus. 40 Scripture and 
daily affirmation cards that match the book. Mahogany holder 
included. (Zondervan/Inspirio) 

3. The Purpose-Driven ® Life Album. Twelve new songs about God’s 
purposes, by top Christian artists. (Maranatha Music) 

4. The Purpose-Driven ® Life Video Curriculum. Six sessions taught 
by Rick Warren and used in churches during a 40 Days of Purpose 
spiritual growth emphasis. Study guides available. 

( www.purposedrivenlife. com) 

5. The Purpose-Driven ® Church. This award-winning book shows 
how your church can help people live God’s five purposes for our 
lives. Available in book and DVD in 20 languages. Millions of 
people have studied this in churches and groups. (Zondervan and 
Purpose Driven Ministries) 

6 . Foundations: 11 Core Truths to Build Tour Life on. A popular 
Saddleback Church curriculum on the biblical foundation of 
purpose-driven living. This 24-week study for small groups or 
adult classes includes extensive teachings notes, teacher’s guide, 
learner’s guide, small-group discussion questions, and 
PowerPoint slides. (Zondervan) 

7. Doing Life Together. A 30-week small group curriculum that 
focuses on applying God’s purposes to your life. (Zondervan) 


Appendix 2: Resources 


323 


8 . Planned for God’s Pleasure. This beautiful book and inspirational 
music CD take the groundbreaking message of The Purpose- 
Driven Life and apply it in a way that encourages every one to 
find meaning and significance through reflection on God’s 
purposes for one’s life. (Zondervan/Inspirio) 

For People in Full-Time Ministry 

Entail toolbox@pastors.com for a free subscription to Rick Warren’s 
Ministry Toolbox, a weekly email newsletter for pastors and others in full¬ 
time ministry. 

For information on the many different Purpose Driven ® Seminars,, 
contact Purpose Driven, 1 Saddleback Parkway, Lake Forest, CA 92630. 
Telephone: (800) 633-8876. 

Free Resources 

Email devotional@purposedrivenlife.com for a free subscription to the 
weekly Purpose-Driven Life Devotional. 

Let us know which of these free items you would like by writing 
free@purposedrivenlife.com. 

Tour First Steps for Spiritual Growth booklet 
A personal daily Bible reading plan 
A list of recommended books on each purpose 
How to pray for missionaries 
The Purpose-Driven ® Life Health Assessment 
Information on Celebrate Recovery 
Information on Kingdom Builders 

Information on 40 Days of Purpose, a spiritual growth emphasis for 
your church 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


324 


Appendix 3: 

WHY USE SO MANY 
TRANSLATIONS? 


This book contains nearly a thousand quotations from Scripture. I 
have intentionally varied the Bible translations used for two important 
reasons. First, no matter how wonderful a translation is, it has 
limitations. The Bible was originally written using 11,280 Hebrew, 
Aramaic, and Greek words, but the typical English translation uses only 
around 6,000 words. Obviously, nuances and shades of meaning can be 
missed, so it is always helpful to compare translations. 

Second, and even more important, is the fact that we often miss the 
frill impact of familiar Bible verses, not because of poor translating, but 
simply because they have become so familiar! We think we know what a 
verse says because we have read it or heard it so many times. Then when 
we find it quoted in a book, we skim over it and miss the full meaning. 
Therefore I have deliberately used paraphrases in order to help you see 
God’s truth in new, fresh ways. English-speaking people should thank 
God that we have so many different versions to use for devotional 
reading. 

Also, since the verse divisions and number were not included in the 
Bible until 1560 A.D., I haven’t always quoted the entire verse, but 
rather focused on the phrase that was appropriate. My model for this is 
Jesus and how he and the apostles quoted the Old Testament. They 
often just quoted a phrase to make a point. 

AMP The Amplified Bible 

Grand Rapids: Zondervan (1965) 

CEV Contemporary English Version 

New York: American Bible Society (1995) 

GWT God ’s Word Translation 

Grand Rapids: World Publishing, Inc. (1995) 

KJV King James Version 


Appendix y. Why Use So Many Translations? 


325 


LB Living Bible 

Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House Publishers (1979) 

Msg The Message 

Colorado Springs: Navpress (1993) 

NAB New American Bible 

Chicago: Catholic Press (1970) 

NASB New American Standard Bible 

Anaheim, CA: Foundation Press (1973) 

NCV New Century Version 

Dallas: Word Bibles (1991) 

NIV New International Version 

Colorado Springs: International Bible Society 
(1978,1984) 

NJB New Jerusalem Bible 

Garden City, NY: Doubleday (1985) 

NLT New Living Translation 

Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House Publishers (1996) 

NRSV New Revised Standard Version 

Grand Rapids: Zondervan (1990) 

Ph New Testament in Modern English by J. B. Phillips 
New York: Macmillan (1958) 

TEV Today’s English Version 

New York: American Bible Society (1992) 

(Also called Good News Translation) 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


32 6 


Notes 


A Journey with Purpose 

1. Romans 12:2 (NLT). 

2. 2 Timothy 2:7 (NIV). 

Day 1: It All Starts 
with God 

1. Job 12:10 (TEV). 

2. Romans 8:6 (Msg). 

3. Matthew 16:25 (Msg). 

4. Hugh S. Moorhead, 
comp., The Meaning of 
Life According to Our 
Century’s Greatest 
Writers and Thinkers 
(Chicago: Chicago 
Review Press, 1988). 

5. 1 Corinthians 2:7 
(Msg). 

6. Ephesians 1:11 (Msg). 

7. David Friend, ed.. The 
Meaning of Life 
(Boston: Little, Brown, 
1991), 194. 

Day 2: You Are Not an 
Accident 

1. Psalm 138:8a (NIV). 

2. Psalm 139:15 (Msg). 

3. Psalm 139:16 (LB). 

4. Acts 17:26 (NIV). 

5. Ephesians 1:4a (Msg). 

6. James 1:18 (NCV)." 

7. Michael Denton, 
Nature’s Destiny: How 
the Laws of Biology 
Repeal Purpose in the 
Universe (New York: 
Free Press, 1998), 389. 

8. Isaiah 45:18 (GWT). 

9. 1 John 4:8 

10. Isaiah 46:3-4 (NCV). 

11. Russell Kelfer. Used by 
permission. 

Day 3: What Drives Your 
Life? 

1. Genesis 4:12 (NIV). 

2. Psalm 32:1 (LB). 

3. Job 5:2 (TEV). 

4. 1 John 4:18 (Msg). 

5. Matthew 6:24 (NLT). 

6. Isaiah 49:4 (NIV). 

7. Job 7:6 (LB). 

8. Job 7:16 (TEV). 


9. Jeremiah 29:11 (NCV). 

10. Ephesians 3:20 (LB). 

11. Proverbs 13:7 (Msg). 

12. Isaiah 26:3 (TEV). 

13. Ephesians 5:17 (Msg). 

14. Philippians 3:13 (NLT). 

15. Philippians 3:15 (Msg). 

16. Romans 14:10b, 12 
(NLT). 

17. John 14:6 (NIV). 

Day 4: Made to Last 
Forever 

1. Ecclesiastes 3:11 (NLT). 

2. 2 Corinthians 5:1 (TEV). 

3. Philippians 3:7 (NLT). 

4. 1 Corinthians 2:9 (LB). 

5. Matthew 25:34 (NIV). 

6. C. S. Lewis, The Last 
Battle (New York: 
Collier Books, 1970), 
184. 

7. Psalm 33:11 (TEV). 

8. Ecclesiastes 7:2 (CEV). 

9. Hebrews 13:14 (LB). 

10. 2 Corinthians 5:6 (LB). 

Day 5: Seeing Life from 
God’s View 

1. Romans 12:2 (TEV). 

2. 2 Chronicles 32:31 
(NLT). 

3. 1 Corinthians 10:13 
(TEV). 

4. James 1:12 (GWT). 

5. Psalm 24:1 (TEV). 

6. Genesis 1:28 (TEV). 

7. 1 Corinthians 4:7b 
(NLT). 

8. 1 Corinthians 4:2 
(NCV). 

9. Matthew 25:14-29. 

10. Matdtew 25:21 (NIV). 

11. Luke 16:11 (NLT). 

12. Luke 12:48b (NIV). 

Day 6: Life Is a Temporary 
Assignment 

1. Job 8:9 (NLT). 

2. Psalm 39:4 (LB). 

3. Psalm 119:19 (NLT). 

4. 1 Peter 1:17 (GWT). 

5. Philippians. 3:19-20 
(NLT). 


6. James 4:4 (Msg). 

7. 2 Corinthians 5:20 
(NLT). 

8. 1 Peter 2:11 (Msg). 

9. 1 Corinthians 7:31 
(NLT). 

10. 2 Corinthians 4:18b 
(Msg). 

11. John 16:33; 16:20; 
15:18-19. 

12. 2 Corinthians 4:18 
(NIV). 

13. 1 Peter 2:11 (GWT). 

14. Hebrews 11:13, 16 
(NCV). 

Day 7: The Reason for 
Everything 

1. Psalm 19:1 (NIV). 

2. Genesis 3:8; Exodus 
33:18-23; 40:33-38; 

1 Kings 7:51; 8:10-13; 
John 1:14; Ephesians 
2:21-22; 2 Corinthians 
4:6-7. 

3. Exodus 24:17; 40:34; 
Psalm 29:1; Isaiah 6:3-4; 
60:1; Luke 2:9. 

4. Revelation 21:23 (NIV). 

5. Hebrews 1:3 (NIV); also 

2 Corinthians 4:6b (LB). 

6. John 1:14 (GWT). 

7. 1 Chronicles 16:24; 
Psalm 29:1; 66:2; 96:7; 
2 Corinthians 3:18. 

8. Revelation 4:11a (NLT). 

9. Romans 3:23 (NIV). 

10. Isaiah 43:7 (TEV). 

11. John 17:4 (NLT). 

12. Romans 6:13b (NLT). 

13. 1 John 3:14 (CEV). 

14. Romans 15:7 (NLT). 

15. John 13:34-35 (NIV). 

16. 2 Corinthians 3:18 
(NLT). 

17. Philippians 1:11 (NLT); 
see also John 15:8 
(GWT). 

18. 1 Peter 4:10-11 (NLT); 
see also 2 Corinthians 
8:19b (NCV). 

19. 2 Corinthians 4:15 
(NLT). 

20. John 12:27-28 (NASB). 


Notes 


327 


21. John 12:25 (Msg). 

22. 2 Peter 1:3 (Msg). 

23. John 1:12 (NIV). 

24. John 3:36a (Msg). 

Day 8: Planned for God’s 
Pleasure 

1. Ephesians 1:5 (TEV). 

2. Genesis 6:6; Exodus 
20:5; Deuteronomy 
32:36; Judges 2:20; 

1 Kings 10:9; 1 Chron¬ 
icles 16:27; Psalms 2:4; 
5:5; 18:19; 35:27; 
37:23; 103:13; 104:31; 
Ezekiel 5:13; 1 John 
4:16. 

3. Psalm 147:11 (CEV). 

4. John 4:23. 

5. Isaiah 29:13 (NIV). 

6. Psalm 105:4 (TEV). 

7. Psalm 113:3 (LB). 

8. Psalms 119:147; 5:3; 
63:6; 119:62. 

9. Psalm 34:1 (GWT). 

10. 1 Corinthians 10:31 
(NIV). 

11. Colossians 3:23 (NIV). 

12. Romans 12:1 (Msg). 

Day 9: What Makes God 
Smile? 

1. Ephesians 5:10 (Msg). 

2. Genesis 6:8 (LB). 

3. Genesis 6:9b (NLT). 

4. Hosea 6:6 (LB). 

5. Matthew 22:37-38 
(NIV). 

6. Hebrews 11:7 (Msg). 

7. Genesis 2:5-6. 

8. Psalm 147:11 (TEV). 

9. Hebrews 11:6 (NIV). 

10. Genesis 6:22 (NLT); see 
also Hebrews 11:7b 
(NCV). 

11. Psalm 100:2 (LB). 

12. Psalm 119:33 (LB). 

13. James 2:24 (CEV). 

14. John 14:15 (TEV). 

15. Genesis 8:20 (NIV). 

16. Hebrews 13:15 (KJV). 

17. Psalm 116:17 (KJV). 

18. Psalm 69:30-31 (NIV). 

19. Psalm 68:3 (TEV). 

20. Genesis 9:1, 3 (NIV). 

21. Psalm 37:23 (NLT). 

22. Psalm 33:15 (Msg). 

23. Isaiah 45:9 (CEV). 

24. 1 Timothy 6:17 (TEV). 

25. Psalm 103:14 (GWT). 


26. 2 Corinthians 5:9 (TEV). 

27. Psalm 14:2 (LB). 

Day 10: The Heart of 
Worship 

1. 1 John 4:9-10, 19. 

2. Romans 12:1 (TEV). 

3. Psalm 145:9. 

4. Psalm 139:3. 

5. Matthew 10:30. 

6. 1 Timothy 6:17b. 

7. Jeremiah 29:11. 

8. Psalm 86:5. 

9. Psalm 145:8. 

10. Romans 5:8 (NRSV). 

11. Genesis 3:5. 

12. Luke 5:5 (NIV). 

13. Psalm 37:7a (GWT). 

14. Matthew 6:24. 

15. Matthew 6:21 

16. Mark 14:36 (NLT). 

17. Job 22:21 (NLT). 

18. Romans 6:17 (Msg). 

19. Joshua 5:13-15. 

20. Luke 1:38 (NLT). 

21. James 4:7a (NCV). 

22. Romans 12:1 (KJV). 

23. Romans 12:1 (CEV). 

24. 2 Corinthians 5:9 (NIV). 

25. Philippians 4:13 (Amp). 

26. 1 Corinthians 15:31. 

27. Luke 9:23 (NCV). 

Day 11: Becoming Best 

Friends with God 

1. Psalms 95:6; 136:3; 
John 13:13; Jude 1:4; 

1 John 3:1; Isaiah 
33:22; 47:4; Psalm 
89:26. 

2. Exodus 33:11, 17; 

2 Chronicles 20:7; 

Isaiah 41:8; James 2:23; 
Acts 13:22; Genesis 6:8; 
5:22 (NLT); Job 29:4. 

3. Romans 5:11 (NLT). 

4. 2 Corinthians 5:18a 
(TEV). 

5. 1 John 1:3. 

6. 1 Corinthians 1:9. 

7. 2 Corinthians 13:14. 

8. John 15:15 (NIV). 

9. John 3:29. 

10. Exodus 34:14 (NLT). 

11. Acts 17:26-27 (Msg). 

12. Jeremiah 9:24 (TEV). 

13. See “How to Have a 
Meaningful Quiet 
Time” in Personal Bible 
Study Methods, Rick 


Warren, 1981. Available 
from www.pastors.com. 

14. 1 Thessalonians 5:17. 

15. Ephesians 4:6b (NCV). 

16. Brother Lawrence, The 
Practice of the Presence of 
God (Grand Rapids: 
Revell/Spire Books, 
1967), Eighth Letter. 

17. 1 Thessalonians 5:17 
(Msg). 

18. Psalms 23:4; 143:5; 
145:5; Joshua 1:8; 

Psalm 1:2. 

19. 1 Samuel 3:21. 

20. Job 23:12 (NIV). 

21. Psalm 119:97 (NIV). 

22. Psalm 77:12 (NLT). 

23. Genesis 18:17; Daniel 
2:19; 1 Corinthians 
2:7-10. 

24. Psalm 25:14 (LB). 

Day 12: Developing Your 
Friendship 
with God 

1. Matthew 11:19. 

2. Job 42:7b (Msg). 

3. Exodus 33:1-17. 

4. Exodus 33:12-17 
(Msg). 

5. Consider Job (Job 
7:17-21), Asaph (Psalm 
83:13), Jeremiah 
(Jeremiah 20:7), Naomi 
(Ruth 1:20). 

6. Psalm 142:2-3a (NLT). 

7. John 15:14 (NIV). 

8. John 15:9-11 (NLT). 

9. 1 Samuel 15:22 (NCV). 

10. Matthew 3:17 (NLT). 

11. 2 Corinthians 11:2 
(Msg). 

12. Psalm 69:9 (NLT). 

13. Psalm 27:4 (LB). 

14. Psalm 63:3 (CEV). 

15. Genesis 32:26 (NIV). 

16. Philippians 3:10 (Amp). 

17. Jeremiah 29:13 (Msg). 

18. 1 Timothy 6:21a (LB). 

Day 13: Worship That 
Pleases God 

1. Hebrews 12:28 (TEV) 

2. John 4:23 (NIV). 

3. 1 Samuel 16:7b (NIV). 

4. Hebrews 13:15; Psalm 
7:17; Ezra 3:11; Psalms 
149:3; 150:3; 

Nehemiah 8:6. 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


328 


5. Gary Thomas, Sacred 
Pathways (Grand Rapids: 
Zondervan, 2000). 

6. John 4:23 (Msg). 

7. Matthew 6:7 (KJV). 

8. See 11 -week tape series 
on the names of God, 

“How God Meets Tour 
Deepest Needs, ” by 
Saddleback Pastors 
(1999), www. 
pastors.com. 

9. 1 Corinthians 14:40 
(NIV). 

10. 1 Corinthians 14:16-17 
(CEV). 

11. Romans 12:1 (NIV). 

12. Psalm 50:14(TEV); 
Hebrews 13:15 (CEV); 
Psalms 51:17; 54:6 
(NIV); Philippians 4:18 
(NIV); Psalm 141:2 
(GWT); Hebrews 13:16; 
Mark 12:33 (Msg); 
Romans 12:1 (NIV). 

13. 2 Samuel 24:24 (TEV). 

14. Matt Redman, “Heart 
of Worship” 

(Kingsway’s Thankyou 
Music, 1997). 

Day 14: When God Seems 
Distant 

1. Philip Yancey, Reaching 
for the Invisible God 
(Grand Rapids: Zon¬ 
dervan, 2000), 242. 

2. 1 Samuel 13:14; Acts 
13:22. 

3. Psalm 10:1 (LB). 

4. Psalm 22:1 (NLT). 

5. Psalm 43:2 (TEV); see 
also Psalms 44:23 (TEV); 
74:11 (TEV); 88:14 
(Msg); 89:49 (LB). 

6. Deuteronomy 31:8; 
Psalm 37:28; John 
14:16-18; Hebrews 
13:5. 

7. Isaiah 45:15. 

8. Floyd McClung, 

Finding Friendship with 
God (Ann Arbor, MI: 
Vine Books, 1992), 186. 

9. Job 23:8-10 (NLT). 

10. Psalm 51; Ephesians 

4:29-30; 1 Thessalo- 
nians 5:19; Jeremiah 
2:32; 1 Corinthians 
8:12; James 4:4 (NLT). 


11. Job 1:20-21 (NIV). 

12. Job 7:11 (TEV). 

13. Job 29:4 (NIV). 

14. Psalm 116:10 (NCV). 

15. Job 10:12. 

16. Job 42:2; 37:5, 23. 

17. Job 23:10; 31:4. 

18. Job 34:13. 

19. Job 23:14. 

20. Job 19:25. 

21. Job 23:12 (NIV). 

22. Job 13:15 (CEV). 

23. 2 Corinthians 5:21 
(TEV). 

Day 15: Formed for God’s 
Family 

1. Ephesians 1:5 (NLT). 

2. James 1:18 (LB). 

3. 1 Peter 1:3b (LB); see 
also Romans 8:15-16 
(TEV). 

4. Mark 8:34; Acts 2:21; 
Romans 10:13; 2 Peter 
3:9. 

5. Galatians 3:26 (NLT). 

6. Ephesians 3:14-15 (LB). 

7. 1 John 3:1; Romans 
8:29; Galatians 4:6-7; 
Romans 5:2; 1 Corin¬ 
thians 3:23; Ephesians 
3:12; 1 Peter 1:3-5; 
Romans 8:17. 

8. Galatians 4:7b (NLT). 

9. Philippians 4:19 (NIV). 

10. Ephesians 1:7; Romans 
2:4; 9:23; 11:33; 
Ephesians 3:16; 2:4. 

11. Ephesians 1:18b (NLT). 

12. 1 Thessalonians 5:10; 
4:17. 

13. 1 John 3:2; 2 Corinthi¬ 
ans 3:18. 

14. Revelation 21:4. 

15. Mark 9:41; 10:30; 

1 Corinthians 3:8; 
Hebrews 10:35; 
Matthew 25:21,23. 

16. Romans 8:17; 

Colossians 3:4; 2 Thes¬ 
salonians 2:14; 2 Tim¬ 
othy 2:12; 1 Peter 5:1. 

17. 1 Peter 1:4 (NLT). 

18. Colossians 3:23-24a 
(NIV). 

19. Matthew 28:19 (NLT). 

20. 1 Corinthians 12:13 
(NLT). 

21. Acts 2:41; 8:12-13, 
35-38. 


22. Hebrews 2:11 (CEV). 

23. Matthew 12:49-50 
(NLT). 

Day 16: What Matters 
Most 

1. Galatians 5:14 (LB). 

2. 1 Peter 2:17b (CEV). 

3. Galatians 6:10 (NCV). 

4. John 13:35 (LB). 

5. 1 Corinthians 14:1a 
(LB). 

6. 1 Corinthians 13:3 
(Msg). 

7. Matthew 22:37-40 
(NLT). 

8. 1 Corinthians 13:13 
(NCV). 

9. Matthew 25:34-46. 

10. Matthew 25:40 (NRSV). 

11. Galatians 5:6 (NIV). 

12. 1 John 3:18 (TEV). 

13. Ephesians 5:2 (LB). 

14. John 3:16a. 

15. Galatians 6:10 (NLT). 

16. Ephesians 5:16 (NCV). 

17. Proverbs 3:27 (TEV). 

Day 17: A Place to Belong 

1. Genesis 2:18. 

2. 1 Corinthians 12:12; 
Ephesians 2:21, 22; 3:6; 
4:16; Colossians 2:19; 

1 Thessalonians 4:17. 

3. Romans 12:5 (NIV). 

4. Romans 12:4-5; 1 Co¬ 
rinthians 6:15; 12:12- 
27. 

5. Romans 12:4-5 (Msg). 

6. Ephesians 4:16. 

7. Matthew 16:18 (NLT). 

8. Ephesians 5:25 (GWT). 

9. 2 Corinthians 11:2; 
Ephesians 5:27; 
Revelation 19:7. 

10. 1 Peter 2:17b (Msg). 

11. 1 Corinthians 5:1-13; 
Galatians 6:1-5. 

12. Ephesians 2:19b (LB). 

13. John 13:35 (NLT). 

14. Galatians 3:28 (Msg); 
see also John 17:21. 

15. 1 Corinthians 12:27 
(NCV). 

16. 1 Corinthians 12:26 
(NCV). 

17. Ephesians 4:16; Romans 
12:4-5; Colossians 
2:19, 1 Corinthians 
12:25. 


Notes 


329 


18. 1 John 3:16 (NIV). 

19. Ephesians 4:16b (NLT). 

20. 1 Corinthians 12:7 
(NLT). 

21. Ephesians 2:10 (Msg). 

22. 1 Corinthians 10:12; 
Jeremiah 17:9; 1 Tim¬ 
othy 1:19. 

23. Hebrews 3:13 (NIV). 

24. James 5:19 (Msg). 

25. Acts 20:28-29; 1 Peter 
5:1-4; Hebrews 13:7, 

17. 

26. Hebrews 13:17 (NLT). 

27. Acts 2:42 (Msg). 

28. 2 Corinthians 8:5 
(TEV). 

Day 18: Experiencing Life 
Together 

1. Matthew 18:20 (NASB). 

2. 1 John 1:7-8 (NCV). 

3. James 5:16a (Msg). 

4. 1 Corinthians 12:25 
(Msg). 

5. Romans 1:12 (NCV). 

6. Romans 12:10 (NRSV). 

7. Romans 14:19 (NIV). 

8. Colossians 3:12 (GWT). 

9. Philippians 3:10; 
Hebrews 10:33-34. 

10. Galatians 6:2 (NLT). 

11. Job 6:14 (NIV). 

12. 2 Corinthians 2:7 
(CEV). 

13. Colossians 3:13 (LB). 

14. Colossians 3:13 (NLT). 

Day 19: Cultivating 
Community 

1. Ephesians 4:3 (NCV). 

2. 1 Timothy 3:14-15 
(NCV). 

3. Ephesians 4:15. 

4. Proverbs 24:26 (TEV). 

5. Galatians 6:1-2 (NCV). 

6. Ephesians 4:25 (Msg). 

7. Proverbs 28:23 (NLT). 

8. Ecclesiastes 8:6 (TEV). 

9. 1 Timothy 5:1-2 
(GWT). 

10. 1 Corinthians 5:3-12 
(Msg). 

11. 1 Peter 5:5b (NIV). 

12. 1 Peter 5:5c (NIV). 

13. Romans 12:16 (NLT). 

14. Philippians 2:3-4 
(NCV). 

15. Romans 15:2 (LB). 

16. Titus 3:2 (Msg). 


17. Romans 12:10 (GWT). 

18. Proverbs 16:28 (TEV). 

19. Titus 3:10 (NIV). 

20. Hebrews 10:25 (TEV). 

21. Acts 2:46 (LB). 

Day 20: Restoring Broken 
Fellowship 

1. 2 Corinthians 5:18 
(GWT) 

2. Philippians 2:1-2 (Msg). 

3. Romans 15:5 (Msg). 

4. John 13:35. 

5. 1 Corinthians 6:5 (TEV). 

6. 1 Corinthians 1:10 
(Msg). 

7. Matthew 5:9 (NLT). 

8. 2 Corinthians 5:18 
(Msg). 

9. James 4:1-2 (NIV). 

10. Matthew 5:23-24 
(Msg). 

11. 1 Peter 3:7; Proverbs 
28:9. 

12. Job 5:2 (TEV); 18:4 
(TEV). 

13. Philippians 2:4 (TEV). 

14. Psalm 73:21-22 (TEV). 

15. Proverbs 19:11 (NIV). 

16. Romans 15:2 (LB). 

17. Romans 15:3 (NJB). 

18. Matthew 7:5 (NLT). 

19. 1 John 1:8 (Msg). 

20. Proverbs 15:1 (Msg). 

21. Proverbs 16:21 (TEV). 

22. Ephesians 4:29 (TEV). 

23. Romans 12:18 (TEV). 

24. Romans 12:10; 
Philippians 2:3. 

25. Matthew 5:9 (Msg). 

26. 1 Peter 3:11 (NLT). 

27. Man hew 5:9. 

Day 21: Protecting Your 
Church 

1. John 17:20-23. 

2. Ephesians 4:3 (NIV). 

3. Romans 14:19 (Ph). 

4. Romans 10:12; 12:4-5; 
1 Corinthians 1:10; 8:6; 
12:13; Ephesians 4:4; 
5:5; Philippians 2:2. 

5. Romans 14:1; 2 Tim¬ 
othy 2:23. 

6. 1 Corinthians 1:10 
(NLT). 

7. Ephesians 4:2 (NLT). 

8. Dietrich Bonhoffer, Life 
Together (New York: 
HarperCollins, 1954). 


9. Romans 14:13; James 
4:11; Ephesians 4:29; 
Matthew 5:9; James 5:9. 

10. Romans 14:4 (CEV). 

11. Romans 14:10 (Ph). 

12. Revelation 12:10. 

13. Romans 14:19 (Msg). 

14. Proverbs. 17:4; 16:28; 
26:20; 25:9; 20:19. 

15. Proverbs 17:4 (CEV). 

16. Jude 1:19 (Msg). 

17. Galatians 5:15 (Amp). 

18. Proverbs 20:19 (NRSV). 

19. Proverbs 26:20 (LB). 

20. Matthew 18:15-17a 
(Msg). 

21. Matthew 18:17; 1 Co¬ 
rinthians 5:5. 

22. Hebrews 13:17 (Msg). 

23. Hebrews 13:17 (NIV). 

24. 2 Timothy 2:14, 23-26; 
Philippians 4:2; Titus 
2:15-3:2, 10-11. 

25. 1 Thessalonians 5:12— 
13a (Msg). 

26. 1 Corinthians 10:24 
(NLT). 

Day 22: Created to 

Become Like 
Christ 

1. Genesis 1:26 (NCV). 

2. Genesis 6:9; Psalm 
139:13-16; James 3:9. 

3. 2 Corinthians 4:4 
(NLT); Colossians 1:15 
(NLT); Hebrews 1:3 
(NIV). 

4. Ephesians 4:24 (GWT). 

5. Genesis 3:5 (KJV). 

6. Ephesians 4:22 (Msg). 

7. Matthew 5:1-12. 

8. Galatians 5:22-23. 

9. 1 Corinthians 13. 

10. 2 Peter 1:5-8. 

11. John 10:10. 

12. 2 Corinthians 3:18b 
(NLT). 

13. Philippians 2:13 (NLT). 

14. 1 Kings 19:12 (NIV). 

15. Colossians 1:27 (NLT). 

16. Joshua 3:13-17. 

17. Luke 13:24; Romans 
14:19; Ephesians 4:3 (all 
NIV); 2 Timothy 2:15 
(NCV); Hebrews 4:11; 
12:14; 2 Peter 1:5; 

2 Peter 3:14 (all NIV). 

18. Ephesians 4:22 (Msg). 

19. Ephesians 4:23 (CEV). 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


330 


20. Romans 12:2. 

21. Ephesians 4:24 (NIV). 

22. Ephesians 4:13 (CEV). 

23. 1 John 3:2 (NLT). 

24. 1 Corinthians 10:31; 
16:14; Colossians 3:17, 
23. 

25. Romans 12:2 (Msg). 

Day 23: How We Grow 

1. Matthew 9:9 (NLT). 

2. 2 Peter 3:11 (NLT). 

3. Philippians 2:12-13 
(NIV). 

4. Proverbs 4:23 (TEV). 

5. Romans 12:2b (NLT). 

6. Ephesians 4:23 (NLT). 

7. Philppians 2:5 (CEV). 

8. 1 Corinthians 14:20 
(NIV). 

9. Romans 8:5 (NCV). 

10. 1 Corinthians 13:11 
(NIV). 

11. Romans 15:2-3a (CEV). 

12. 1 Corinthians 2:12a 
(CEV). 

Day 24: Transformed by 
Truth 

1. John 17:17 (NIV). 

2. 2 Timothy 3:17 (Msg). 

3. Hebrew 4:12; Acts 
7:38; 1 Peter 1:23. 

4. John 6:63 (NASB). 

5. James 1:18 (NCV). 

6. Job 23:12 (NIV). 

7. 1 Peter 2:2; Matdtew 
4:4, 1 Corinthians 3:2; 
Psalm 119:103. 

8. 1 Peter 2:2 (NIV). 

9. John 8:31 (NASB, 1978 
edition). 

10. Proverbs 30:5 (NIV). 

11. 2 Timothy 3:16 (CEV). 

12. Acts 24:14 (NIV). 

13. Luke 8:18 (NIV). 

14. James 1:21b (Amp). 

15. Deuteronomy 17:19a 
(NCV). 

16. Rick Warren, Twelve 
Personal Bible Study 
Methods. This book has 
been translated into six 
languages. Available 
from www.pastors.com. 

17. James 1:25 (NCV). 

18. Psalms 119:11; 

119:105; 119:49-50; 
Jeremiah 15:16; 
Proverbs 22:18; 1 Peter 
3:15. 


19. Colossians 3:16a (LB). 

20. 2 Corinthians 3:18 
(NIV). 

21. Acts 13:22 (NIV). 

22. Psalm 119:97 (NCV). 

23. John 15:7; Joshua 1:8; 
Psalm 1:2-3. 

24. James 1:22 (KJV). 

25. Matdtew 7:24 (NIV). 

26. John 13:17 (NIV). 

Day 25: Transformed by 
Trouble 

1. John 16:33. 

2. 1 Peter 4:12 (LB). 

3. Psalm 34:18 (NLT). 

4. Genesis 39:20-22. 

5. Daniel 6:16-23. 

6. Jeremiah 38:6. 

7. 2 Corinthians 11:25. 

8. Daniel 3:1-26. 

9. 2 Corinthians 1:9 (LB). 

10. Psalm 139:16. 

11. Romans 8:28-29 (NLT). 

12. Matdtew 6:10 (KJV). 

13. Matdtew 1:1-16. 

14. Romans 5:3-4 (NCV). 

15. 1 Peter 1:7a (NCV). 

16. Janies 1:3 (Msg). 

17. Hebrews 5:8-9. 

18. Romans 8:17 (Msg). 

19. Jeremiah 29:11 (NIV). 

20. Genesis 50:20 (NIV). 

21. Isaiah 38:17 (CEV). 

22. Hebrews 12:10b (Msg). 

23. Hebrews 12:2a (LB). 

24. Hebrews 11:26 (NIV). 

25. 2 Corinthians 4:17 
(NLT). 

26. Romans 8:17-18 (NLT). 

27. 1 Thessalonians 5:18 
(NIV). 

28. Philippians 4:4 (NIV). 

29. Luke 6:23 (NCV). 

30. Janies 1:3-4 (Pit). 

31. Hebrews 10:36 (Msg). 

Day 26: Growing through 
Temptation 

1. Galatians 5:22-23 
(NLT). 

2. 2 Corinthians 2:11 
(NLT). 

3. Mark 7:21-23 (NLT). 

4. Janies 4:1 (LB). 

5. Hebrews 3:12 (CEV). 

6. John 8:44. 

7. Janies 1:14-16 (TEV). 

8. 1 Corinthians 10:13 
(NLT). 


9. Hebrews 4:15. 

10. 1 Peter 5:8 (Msg). 

11. Matthew 26:41; 
Ephesians 6:10-18; 

1 Thessalonians 5:6, 8; 

1 Peter 1:13; 4:7; 5:8. 

12. Ephesians 4:27 (TEV). 

13. Proverbs 4:26-27 
(TEV). 

14. Proverbs 16:17 (CEV). 

15. Psalnt 50:15 (GWT). 

16. Hebrews 4:15 (NLT). 

17. Hebrews 4:16 (TEV). 

18. James 1:12 (NCV). 

Day 27: Defeating 
Temptation 

1. James 4:7. 

2. Job 31:1 (NLT). 

3. Psalnt 119:37a (TEV). 

4. Romans 12:21. 

5. Hebrews 3:1 (NIV). 

6. 2 Timothy 2:8 (GWT). 

7. Philippians 4:8 (TEV). 

8. Proverbs 4:23 (TEV). 

9. 2 Corinthians 10:5 
(NCV). 

10. Ecclesiastes 4:9-10 
(CEV). 

11. James 5:16 (NIV). 

12. 1 Corinthians 10:13. 

13. Romans 3:23. 

14. James 4:6-7a (NLT). 

15. Ephesians 6:17 (NLT). 

16. Jeremiah 17:9 (NIV). 

17. Proverbs 14:16 (TEV). 

18. 1 Corinthians 10:12 
(Msg). 

Day 28: It Takes Time 

1. Philippians 1:6 (NIV). 

2. Ephesians 4:13 (Ph). 

3. Colossians 3:10a (NCV). 

4. 2 Corinthians 3:18b 
(Msg). 

5. Deuteronomy 7:22. 

6. Romans 13:12; 
Ephesians 4:22-25; 
Colossians 3:7-10, 14. 

7. 1 Timothy 4:15 (GWT). 

8. Ecclesiastes 3:1 (CEV). 

9. Psalm 102:18; 2 Tim¬ 
othy 3:14. 

10. Hebrews 2:1 (Msg). 

11. James 1:4 (Msg). 

12. Habakkuk 2:3 (LB). 

Day 29: Accepting Your 
Assignment 

1. Ephesians 2:10b (TEV). 


Notes 


331 


2. Colossians 3:23-24; 
Matthew 25:34-45; 
Ephesians 6:7. 

3. Jeremiah 1:5 (NCV). 

4. 2 Timothy 1:9 (LB). 

5. 1 Corinthians 6:20 
(CEV). 

6. Romans 12:1 (TEV). 

7. 1 John 3:14 (CEV). 

8. Matthew 8:15 (NCV). 

9. Ephesians 4:4-14; see 
also Romans 1:6-7; 
8:28-30; 1 Corinthians 
1:2, 9, 26; 7:17; 
Philippians 3:14; 

1 Peter 2:9; 2 Peter 
1:3. 

10. 2 Timothy 1:9 (TEV). 

11. 1 Peter 2:9 (GWT). 

12. Romans 7:4 (TEV). 

13. 1 Corinthians 12:27 
(NLT). 

14. Matthew 20:28 (LB). 

15. Romans 14:12 (NLT). 

16. Romans 2:8 (NLT). 

17. Mark 8:35 (LB); see also 
Matthew 10:39; 16:25; 
Luke 9:24; 17:33. 

18. Romans 12:5 (Msg). 

19. 1 Corinthians 12:14a, 

19 (Msg). 

Day 30: Shaped for 
Serving God 

1. Ephesians 2:10 (NIV). 

2. Psalm 139:13-14 
(NLT). 

3. Psalm 139:16 (NLT). 

4. Romans 12:4-8; 1 Co¬ 
rinthians 12; Ephesians 
4:8-15; 1 Corinthians 
7:7. 

5. 1 Corinthians 2:14 
(TEV). 

6. Ephesians 4:7 (CEV). 

7. 1 Corinthians 12:11 
(NLT). 

8. 1 Corinthians 12:29-30 

9. 1 Corinthians 12:7 
(NLT). 

10. 1 Corinthians 12:5 
(NLT). 

11. Proverbs 27:19 (NLT). 

12. Matthew 12:34; Psalm 
34:7; Proverbs 4:23. 

13. Deuteronomy 11:13; 

1 Samuel 12:20; 

Romans 1:9; Ephesians 
6 : 6 . 

14. Proverbs 15:16 (Msg). 


Day 31: Understanding 
Your Shape 

1. 1 Corinthians 12:4-6 
(TEV). 

2. Exodus 31:3-5 (NIV). 

3. Romans 12:6a (NLT). 

4. 1 Corinthians 10:31 
(NIV). 

5. 1 Corinthians 12:6 
(TEV). 

6. Deuteronomy 8:18 
(NIV). 

7. Deuteronomy 14:23 
(LB); Malachi 3:8-11. 

8. Hebrews 13:21 (LB). 

9. 1 Peter 4:10 (LB). 

10. 1 Corinthians 12:6 
(Ph). 

11. Romans 8:28-29. 

12. 2 Corinthians 1:4 
(NLT). 

13. 2 Corinthians 1:8-10 
(LB). 

14. For more help you can 
order the tapes of Class 
301, Discovering Tour 
Shape for Ministry, 
which includes a Shape 
identification tool. 

Day 32: Using What God 
Gave You 

1. Ephesians 5:17 (LB). 

2. Romans 12:3b (Ph). 

3. Galatians 6:4b (Msg). 

4. Deuteronomy 11:2 
(TEV). 

5. Galatians 3:4 (NCV). 

6. John 13:7 (NIV). 

7. Contact www. 
purposedrivenlife. com. 

8. Romans 9:20-21 (JB). 

9. Ephesians 4:7 (LB). 

10. Galatians 2:7-8. 

11. 2 Corinthians 10:13 
(NLT). 

12. Hebrews 12:1 (LB). 

13. Galatians 6:4(NLT). 

14. Galatians 6:4 (CEV). 

15. 2 Corinthians 10:12 
(NIV). 

16. 2 Corinthians 10:12b 
(Msg). 

17. 1 Corindtians 10:12-18. 

18. Philippians 1:9 (NLT). 

19. 2 Timothy 1:6 (NASB). 

20. Matdrew 25:28 (NIV). 

21. 1 Timothy 4:14-15 
(LB). 

22. 2 Timothy 2:15 (Msg). 


23. 1 Corinthians 9:25 
(Msg). 

Day 33: How Real 

Servants Act 

1. Matthew 7:16 (CEV). 

2. 2 Timothy 2:4 (NASB). 

3. Galatians 6:10 (GWT). 

4. Proverbs 3:28 (TEV). 

5. Ecclesiastes 11:4 (NLT). 

6. Colossians 3:23. 

7. Galatians 6:3 (NLT). 

8. John 13:15. 

9. Acts 28:3. 

10. Luke 16:10-12. 

11. Psalm 12:1; Proverbs 
20:6; Philippians 2:19- 
22 . 

12. Matthew 25:23 (NLT). 

13. 1 Peter 5:5 (TEV). 

14. Ephesians 6:6 (KJV); 
Colossians 3:22 (KJV). 

15. Matthew 6:1 (CEV). 

16. Galatians 1:10 (NIV). 

17. Colossians 3:4 (Msg). 

18. 1 Corinthians 12:22-24. 

19. 1 Corinthians 15:58 
(Msg). 

20. Matthew 10:42 (LB). 

Day 34: Thinking Like a 
Servant 

1. 2 Chronicles 25:2 
(NRSV). 

2. Philippians 2:4 (Msg). 

3. Philippians 2:7 (GWT). 

4. Philippians 2:20-21. 

5. Matthew 5:41 (Msg). 

6. 1 Corinthians 4:1 (NJB). 

7. 1 Corinthians 4:2 (TEV). 

8. Luke 16:13 (NIV). 

9. Luke 16:11 (NIV). 

10. Galatians 5:26 (Msg). 

11. Romans 14:4 (GWT). 

12. Nehemiah 6:3 (CEV). 

13. Matthew 26:10 (Msg). 

14. John 13:3-4 (NIV). 

15. 2 Corinthians 10:18 
(CEV). 

16. James 1:1. 

17. Psalm 100:2 (KJV). 

18. John 12:26 (Msg). 

19. Hebrews 6:10 (NLT). 

Day 35: God’s Power in 
Your Weakness 

1. Isaiah 55:9 (CEV). 

2. 1 Corinthians 1:27 
(TEV). 

3. Matthew 5:3. 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


332 


4. 2 Corinthians 12:7. 

5. 2 Corinthians 4:7 (CEV). 

6. Matthew 16:16 (NIV). 

7. Acts 14:15 (NCV). 

8. 2 Corinthians 12:9-10a 
(NLT). 

9. 2 Corinthians 12:10 
(LB). 

10. 2 Corinthians 12:7 
(Msg). 

11. Numbers 12:3. 

12. Judges 6:12 (ICJV). 

13. Romans 4:11 (NLT). 

14. Matthew 16:18 (TEV). 

15. Acts 13:22 (NLT). 

16. Hebrews 11:32-34 
(NLT). 

17. Romans 7:19 (NLT). 

18. 2 Corinthians 6:11 (LB). 

19. 2 Corinthians 1:8 (NLT). 

20. 1 Corinthi a ns 2:3 (NCV). 

21. 2 Corinthians 12:5b 
(LB). 

22. Hebrews 4:1 a (CEV). 

23. Romans 8:26a (NIV). 

Day 36: Made for a 
Mission 

1. Colossians 1:25 (NCV); 
1 Corinthians 12:5. 

2. John 20:21 (NIV). 

3. Luke 2:49 (KJV). 

4. John 19:30. 

5. 2 Corinthians 5:18 
(TEV). 

6. 2 Corinthians 5:20 
(NCV). 

7. Matthew 28:19-20; 
Mark 16:15; Luke 
24:47; John 20:21; Acts 
1 : 8 . 

8. Matthew 28:19-20 
(CEV). 

9. Ezekiel 3:18 (NCV). 

10. 2 Corinthians 5:18 
(LB). 

11. 2 Corinthians 6:1 
(NCV). 

12. 2 Corinthians 5:20 
(Msg). 

13. Acts 4:12 (NCV). 

14. John 9:4 (NLT). 

15. Acts 20:24 (NLT). 

16. Acts 1:7-8 (NIV). 

17. Matthew 24:36 (NIV). 

18. Matthew 24:14 (NCV). 

19. Luke 9:62 (LB). 

20. Luke 22:42 (NLT). 

21. Romans 6:13b (LB). 

22. Matthew 6:33 (NLT). 


Day 37: Sharing Your Life 
Message 

1. 2 Corinthians 2:17b 
(NCV). 

2. 1 John 5:10a (GWT). 

3. 1 Peter 2:9 (Msg). 

4. Acts 1:8 (NIV). 

5. Acts 22 to 26. 

6. 1 Peter 3:15-16 (TEV). 

7. Psalm 119:33 (Msg). 

8. Psalm 106:43 (Msg). 

9. Proverbs 25:12 (TEV). 

10. For some biblical 
examples of each of 
these, see Psalm 51; 
Philippians 4:11 -13; 

2 Corinthians 1:4-10; 
Psalm 40; Psalm 
119:71; Genesis 50:20. 

11. Matthew 12:34 (LB). 

12. Psalm 69:9 (LB). 

13. Jeremiah 20:9 (CEV). 

14. Galatians 4:18 (NIV). 

15. Romans 1:17 (NCV). 

16. 2 Corinthians 5:19 
(NLT). 

17. 2 Corinthians 5:14 
(NIV). 

18. 1 John 4:18 (TEV). 

19. 2 Peter 3:9 (NCV). 

20. Colossians 4:5 (LB). 

Day 38: Becoming a 
World-Class 
Christian 

1. Paul Borthwick’s books 
A Mind for Missions 
(Colorado Springs: 
NavPress, 1987) and 
How to Be a World-Class 
Christian (Colorado 
Springs: Chariot Victor 
Books, 1993), should 
be read by every Chris¬ 
tian. 

2. Revelation 7:9 (CEV). 

3. 1 Corinthians 14:20 
(CEV). 

4. Philippians 2:4 (NLT). 

5. 1 Corinthians 2:12 
(CEV). 

6. 1 Corinthians 10:33 
(GWT). 

7. John 3:16 (KJV). 

8. Acts 17:26-27 (CEV). 

9. Colossians 1:6 (NLT). 

10. Psalm 2:8 (NCV). 

11. Colossians 4:3 (NIV); 
Romans 1:10 (NLT). 

12. Ephesians 6:19 (Msg). 


13. John 17:20 (NIV). 

14. 2 Thessalonians 3:1. 

15. Matthew 9:38. 

16. 2 Corinthians 1:11 
(GWT). 

17. Acts 1:8 (CEV). 

18. 2 Corinthians 4:18 
(NIV). 

19. Luke 9:62 (LB). 

20. 1 Corinthians 7:31 
(Msg). 

21. Hebrews 12:1 (LB). 

22. Matthew 6:20-21 
(CEV). 

23. Luke 16:9 (NIV). 

24. 1 Timothy 6:19 (LB). 

25. Jeremiah 1:7-8 (NLT). 

26. From the Lausanne 
Covenant (1974). 

27. Mark 8:35 (LB). 

Day 39: Balancing Your 
Life 

1. Proverbs 27:17 (NCV). 

2. Philippians 4:9 (TEV). 

3. 1 Thessalonians 5:11 
(NCV). 

4. Lamentations 3:40 
(NLT); 1 Corinthians 
11:28 (NLT), 31 
(TEV); 13:5 (Msg); 
Galatians 6:4 (NIV). 

5. 2 Corinthians 13:5 
(Msg). 

6. Lamentations 3:40 
(Msg). 

7. 2 Corinthians 8:11 (LB). 

8. Hebrews 2:1 (Msg). 

9. Numbers 33:2 (NLT). 

10. Psalm 56:8 (TEV). 

11. Psalm 102:18 (TEV). 

12. Proverbs 11:25 (Msg). 

13. 2 Timothy 2:2b (CEV). 

14. James 4:17 (NCV). 

15. 1 Timothy 4:6 (CEV). 

16. John 17:4 (NIV). 

17. John 17:6-26. 

Day 40: Living with 
Purpose 

1. John 13:17 (NIV). 

2. Psalm 33:11 (TEV). 

3. Proverbs 4:26 (CEV). 

4. Proverbs 17:24 (TEV). 

5. Philippians 1:10 (NLT). 

6. 2 Chronicles 14:4 
(Msg). 

7. Ephesians 3:17 (NLT). 

8. Philippians 4:7 (Msg). 

9. Galatians 5:22-23. 


Notes 


333 


10. Matthew 5:3-12. 

11. 2 Peter 1:5 (Msg). 

12. 1 Timothy 4:16b 
(Msg). 

13. 2 Corinthians 9:12 
(TEV). 

14. John 15:16a (NJB). 

15. Joshua 24:15 (NLT). 

16. Philippians 1:27 (NCV). 


17. Ephesians 5:25 (TEV). 

18. Proverbs 22:18 (NCV). 

19. Proverbs 19:21 (NIV). 

20. 1 Thessalonians 2:4b 
(NLT). 

21. 2 Corinthians 10:13 
(LB). 

22. Acts 13:36a. 

23. Acts 13:22. 


24. Esther 4:14. 

25. 2 Chronicles 16:9 
(NLT). 

26. 1 Corinthians 9:26 
(NLT). 

27. Philippians 1:21 (NIV). 

28. 2 Corinthians 4:17 
(NIV). 

29. Revelation 4:11 (Msg). 


The Purpose-Driven Life 


334 



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Another Landmark Book 
by Rick Warren 

You are not an accident. Even before the 
universe was created, God had you in mind, and 
he planned you for his purposes. These purposes 
will extend far beyond the few years you will spend 
on earth. You were made to last forever! 

Self-help books often suggest that you try to discover the meaning 
and purpose of your life by looking within yourself, but Rick Warren 
says diat is die wrong place to start. You must begin with God, your 
Creator, and his reasons for creating you. You were made by God and 
for God, and until you understand that, life will never make sense. 

This book will help you understand why you are alive and God’s 
amazing plan for you—both here and now, and for eternity. Rick 
Warren will guide you through a personal 40-day spiritual journey that 
will transform your answer to life’s most important question: What on 
earth am I here for? Knowing God’s purpose for creating you will 
reduce your stress, focus your energy, simplify your decisions, give 
meaning to your life, and, most important, prepare you for eternity. 

The Purpose-Driven® Life is a blueprint for Christian living in the 
21st century—a lifestyle based on God’s eternal purposes, not cultural 
values. Using over 1,200 scriptural quotes and references, it challenges 
the conventional definitions of worship, fellowship, discipleship, 
ministry, and evangelism. In the tradition of Oswald Chambers, Rick 
Warren offers distilled wisdom on the essence of what life is all about. 

This is a book of hope and challenge that you will read and re¬ 
read, and it will be a classic treasured by generations to come. 

Rick Warren is the founding pastor of Saddleback Church in Lake 
Forest, California, one of America’s largest and best-known 
churches. His previous book, The Purpose-Driven® Church, has sold 
over a million copies in 20 languages. Winner of the Gold 
Medallion, it was selected as one of the 100 Christian Books That 
Changed the 20th Century. 



www.purposedrivenlife. com 






About the Publisher 

Founded in 1931, Grand Rapids, Michigan based Zondervan, a division 
of HarperCollinsPublishers, is the leading international Christian communi¬ 
cations company, producing best-selling Bibles, books, new media products, 
a growing line of gift products, and award-winning children’s products. The 
world’s largest Bible publisher, Zondervan (www.zondervan.com) holds 
exclusive publishing rights to the New International Version of the Bible and 
has distributed more than 150 million copies worldwide. It is also one of the 
top Christian publishers in the world, selling its award-winning books 
through Christian retailers, general market bookstores, mass merchandisers, 
specialty retailers, and the Internet. Zondervan has received a total of 68 
Gold Medallion awards for its books, more than any other publisher. 


Zondervan - 


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We want to hear from you. Please send your comments about this ebook 
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